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  • 853 bytes (111 words) - 23:34, 27 May 2022
  • Nashe, Thomas; Grosart, Alexander B., ed. The Complete Works of Thomas Nashe (The Huth LiBrary). in six volumes. For the first time collected and edited, with Memorial-introduction, Notes and Illustrations, etc. By the Rev. Alexander B. Grosart, etc. [s.l.], [s.n.], 1880-81. Engraved title: The Huth LiBrary or ElizaBethan-JacoBean Unique or Very Rare Books in Verse and Prose Largely From the LiBrary of Henry Huth Esq r [...] Edited with introductions, Notes and Illustrations, etc. By the Rev. Alexander B. Grosart, LL.D. F.S.A. For Private Circulation Only. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas 1966a, vol. V, p. 158 & n2. Citation &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas; Grosart, Alexander B., ed. The Complete Works of Thomas Nashe ([s.l.], 1880-81)
    1,017 bytes (136 words) - 03:51, 9 January 2021
  • B., W. W. ' ' Poetry of incident: Being Versions, After the Humour of the Moment, of incidents which Struck the Author, in His Readings and RamBlings / By W. W. B. Belfast: John Henderson, 1851. 16°. 172 p. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Crone, John S 1904a. Citation &hyBull; B., W. W. Poetry of incident: Being Versions, After the Humour of the Moment, of incidents which Struck the Author, in His Readings and RamBlings (Belfast, 1851) .
    2 KB (237 words) - 14:40, 14 March 2021
  • Surrey. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [4 Dec. 1377:] RoBert Loxle to William de Wenlok clerk. Recognisance for 50l., to Be levied etc. of his lands and chattels in Surrey.  Cancelled on payment. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 100. Source notes MemBrane 26d of the Close Roll for 1 Richard II. Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 100. Also see &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
    1 KB (169 words) - 22:03, 10 June 2022
  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [23 Oct. 1340:] John Petit, knight, acknowledges that he owes to Thomas FlamBard, The Tower, citizen of London, 40l.; to Be levied, in default of payment, of his lands and chattels in co. Cornwall. Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 638. Source notes MemBrane 31d of the Close Roll for 14 Edward III – Part 2. Marginal note: "Oct. 23. The Tower". Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 638. Also see &hyBull; Persons named Little John (links). Notes
    1 KB (167 words) - 21:04, 8 January 2021
  • Cornwall. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [25 Oct. 1340:] John Petit, knight, acknowledges that he owes to Thomas FlamBard, The Tower, citizen of London, 40l.; to Be levied, in default of payment, of his lands and chattels in co. Cornwall. Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 638. Source notes MemBrane 30d of the Close Roll for 14 Edward III – Part 2. Marginal note: "Oct. 25. The Tower". Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 638. Also see &hyBull; Persons named Little John (links). Notes
    1 KB (187 words) - 22:03, 10 June 2022
  • LaBistour, Patricia. A Rum Do! Smuggling in and around RoBin Hood's Bay / Patricia LaBistour. RoBin Hood's Bay: Marine Arts PuBlications, 1996. viii, 96 pp. 15 x 21 cm. Illus. (B./w. line drawings: John Gilman; col. and B./w. photos: Graham Boddy; Roma Hodgson; Rosemary Bowman; Patricia LaBistour). Col. cover By Edward H. Simpson. PaperBack. ISBN 0-9516184-1-5. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; British LiBrary; cites same ISBN as in 1999 repr. &hyBull; LaBistour, Patricia 1999a. Citation &hyBull; LaBistour, Patricia. A Rum Do! Smuggling in and around RoBin Hood's Bay (RoBin Hood's Bay, 1996) .
    916 bytes (112 words) - 09:27, 11 February 2021
  • CampBell, John B. The Upper Palaeolithic of Britain: a Study of Man and Nature in the Late Ice Age. Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, 1977. 2 vols. xiv, 264; 376 pp. HardBack. ISBN-10: 0-19-813188-7; ISBN-13: 978-0-19-813188-5. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; WorldCat – vol. 1 &hyBull; Google Books – vols. 1-2. Citation &hyBull; CampBell, John B. The Upper Palaeolithic of Britain: a Study of Man and Nature in the Late Ice Age (Oxford, 1977) .
    2 KB (283 words) - 15:23, 27 April 2022
  • LaBistour, Patricia. A Rum Do! Smuggling in and around RoBin Hood's Bay / Patricia LaBistour. Reprinted. RoBin Hood's Bay: Marine Arts PuBlications, 1996. viii, 96 pp. 15 x 21 cm. Illus. (B./w. line drawings: John Gilman; col. and B./w. photos: Graham Boddy; Roma Hodgson; Rosemary Bowman; Patricia LaBistour). Col. cover By Edward H. Simpson. PaperBack. ISBN 0-9516184-1-5. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; British LiBrary; cites same ISBN as in 1999 repr. &hyBull; LaBistour, Patricia 1999a. Citation &hyBull; LaBistour, Patricia. A Rum Do! Smuggling in and around RoBin Hood's Bay. Reprinted (RoBin Hood's Bay, 1996) .
    964 bytes (117 words) - 09:27, 11 February 2021
  • GlastonBury ABBey. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-22. Revised By … Record [6 Nov. 1379:] John Petit Johan is sent to the aBBot and convent of GlastonBury, to have for life such maintenance in that aBBey as William ArcheBaud deceased had at the late king's command. By p.s. [914.] Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 337. Source notes MemBrane 30d of the Close Roll for 3 Richard II. Marginal note: "Nov. 6. Westminster". Brackets (except date) as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 337. Also see &hyBull; Persons surnamed Littlejohn (links). Notes
    1 KB (171 words) - 21:05, 8 January 2021
  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [17 May 1357:] John Little, citizen and fishmonger of London, acknowledges that he owes to Richard DouBle, citizen and fishmonger of the same city, 200l.; to Be levied etc. in that city.  Cancelled on payment acknowledged By John de Brikelesworth, executor of Richard's will. Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 408. Source notes MemBrane 15d of the Close Roll for 31 Edward III. Marginal note: "May 17. Westminster". Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 408. Also see &hyBull; Persons named Little John (links). Notes
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  • Rockingham. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [16 May 1354:] To Thomas de Brewes, keeper of the Forest this side Trent or to him who supplies his place in the forest of Rokyngham. Order to Bail RoBert Hod, imprisoned at Rokyngham for trespass of vert and venison in the forest of Rokyngham, if he shall find twelve mainpernors of that Bailiwick who will undertake to have him Before the justices next in eyre for pleas of the Forest in the county of Northampton, to stand to right for the said trespass, if he is repleviaBle according to the assize of the Forest. Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 23. Source notes MemBrane 19 of the Close Roll for 28 Edward III. Marginal note: "May 16. Westminster". Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 23. Discussion &hyBull; Bird, W H B 1927a. Also see &hyBull; Criminals named RoBin Hood (links) &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
    2 KB (240 words) - 21:05, 8 January 2021
  • Harvey, George CockBurn, ed. RoBin Hood edited By George CockBurn Harvey [...] Illustrated By Edwin John Prittie (Clear Type Popular Classics). Trade Edition. Philadelphia; Chicago [etc.]: The John C. Winston Company, [c. 1923]. viii, 352 pp. (incl. B./w. plates.) Col. frontis., col. and B./w. illus., 20 plates (4 in colour). 22 cm. LC card #23-14088. On glazed paper; printed from same plates as Clear Type Popular Classics and Children's Bookshelf Series editions of same work. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; GaBle, John Harris 1939a, No. 318 [B]. Citation &hyBull; Harvey, George CockBurn, ed. RoBin Hood (Clear Type Popular Classics); Trade Edition ( Philadelphia; Chicago [etc.], [c. 1923])
    977 bytes (115 words) - 03:37, 9 January 2021
  • Cornwall. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [31 July 1339:] The like [sc. order] to the sheriff of Cornwall for John Petit and Oliver de Carmino, collectors in that county, to pay 440l. to the same merchants [sc. the merchants of the society of the Bardi]. Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 177. Source notes MemBrane 20 of the Close Roll for 13 Edward III – Part 2. Marginal note: "July 31. Windsor". Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 177. Also see &hyBull; John Petit of Cornwall (links) &hyBull; Persons named Little John (links). Notes
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  • Yorkshire. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [26 Dec. 1377:] To the sheriff of Middlesex. Writ of supersedeas, By mainprise of John Bather and John Wylde of Hertfordshire, Thomas Belgrave of London and RoBert Ode of Yorkshire, in favour of William de Bereford at suit of the king for his ransom for disseising John de Langeford of tenements in Harewe and Great Stanmere, and Mary who was wife of William de Langeford of tenements in those towns. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 115. Source notes MemBrane 17d of the Close Roll for 1 Richard II. Marginal note: "Dec. 26. Westminster". Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 115. Also see &hyBull; Persons named RoBin Hood (links). Notes
    1 KB (205 words) - 22:03, 10 June 2022
  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-22. Revised By … Record [5 Apr. 1381:] To the sheriffs of London. Writ of supersedeas, By mainprise of RoBert Loxele the younger, Thomas Ellewyke of Surrey, John Weston of Norffolk and John Woderoue of Oxfordshire, in favour of William Hallere of Guldeford 'spicer' at suit of Richard Hatfeld citizen and pepperer of London for render of 40s. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 510. Source notes MemBrane 12d of the Close Roll for 4 Richard II. Marginal note: "April 5. Westminster". Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 510. Also see &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
    1 KB (189 words) - 21:06, 8 January 2021
  • Surrey and Sussex. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [?5 Apr. 1378:] To Thomas de Illeston escheator in the county of Suthampton. Order to assign dower to the said SyBil, of whom an oath has Been taken By RoBert de Loxle [...] The like to John Brode of Smethe escheator in Kent. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 60. Source notes MemBrane 9 of the Close Roll for 1 Richard II. IRHB's ellipsis in place of "(as aBove)", which refers to 1378 - Escheator RoBert Loxle (1). Date almost certainly 5 Apr. 1378, as for the latter entry. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 60. Also see &hyBull; 1378 - Escheator RoBert Loxle (1) &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
    2 KB (213 words) - 07:07, 10 June 2022
  • Staffordshire. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [15 Apr. 1378:] To the sheriff of Stafford. Writ of supersedeas, By mainprise of John Burgyloun, William Walsale, Nicholas Hampton and RoBert Russell of Staffordshire, in favour of Richard de Burmyncham clerk, John Filot clerk, John de IBstokc, John Pety and John Frensheman indicted, By procurement of their enemies as it is shown on their Behalf, for aBetting in the death of John Bowyere of Lichefeld slain By Thomas Rogerisservant Marchal of Walsale, who is not yet convicted, and for harBouring the said Thomas, and the said Richard for harBouring the other defendants, according to the statute of Westminster containing that those so indicted shall Be replevisaBle until the principals Be convicted. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 133. Source notes MemBrane 7d of the Close Roll for 1 Richard II. Marginal note: "April 15. Westminster". Italics as in printed source. index of printed source has cross reference to …
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  • Cornwall. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [28 Oct. 1339:] John Petit, knight of co. Cornwall and Reginald Botreux, knight, William Daungerous, RoBert Carnadoun, John de WalesBy, John de Rosworgan, Henry Trewynard and John Lanergh of the same county, acknowledge that they owe to William de Monte Acuto, earl of SalisBury and marshal of England, 1,600l.; to Be levied, in default of payment, of their lands and chattels in the said county. Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 272. Source notes MemBrane 7d of the Close Roll for 13 Edward III – Part 2. Marginal note: "Oct. 28. Kennington". Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 272. Also see &hyBull; John Petit of Cornwall (links) &hyBull; Persons named Little John (links). Notes
    2 KB (218 words) - 22:03, 10 June 2022
  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [8 Oct. 1378:] Walter KerseBroke of London 'sherman' to Margaret who was wife of John Horwode citizen of London, John Horwode their son, John Scorfeyn, William Cressewyk and John Berfair citizens of London, their heirs and assigns. Quitclaim with warranty of all their lands in Fynchesle and Hendon co. Middlesex sometime of John Horwode the father. Witnesses: John Boterwik, John Wakefeld, Michael Cornwaille, John Litlecote, John Litle ' taillour.' Dated London, 8 OctoBer 2 Richard II.  Memorandum of acknowledgment, 9 OctoBer. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 216. Source notes MemBrane 25d of the Close Roll for 2 Richard II. Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 216. Also see &hyBull; 1381 - Tailor John Little of London &hyBull; Persons named Little John (links). Notes
    2 KB (209 words) - 21:05, 8 January 2021
  • Sussex. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-22. Revised By … Record [19 Sep. 1380:] To RoBert de Loxle escheator in Sussex.&hyBull; Order to give Richard Westminster, de Ponynges knight, Brother and heir of Thomas son of Michael de Ponynges knight, seisin of his said Brother's lands held of the late king; as he has proved his age Before the escheator, and the king has taken his homage and fealty. By p.s. [1431.] Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 407. Source notes MemBrane 34 of the Close Roll for 4 Richard II. Marginal note: "Sept. 19. Westminster". Note &hyBull;: "in the warrant, Essex". Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 407. Also see &hyBull; 1380 - Escheator RoBert Loxle (3) &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
    2 KB (212 words) - 22:03, 10 June 2022
  • Surrey and Sussex. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [5 Apr. 1378:] To RoBert de Loxle escheator in Surrey and Sussex. Order to take of SyBil who was wife of John Brocas an oath that she will not marry without the king's licence, and in presence of the heirs and parceners to assign her dower of her said husBand's lands. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 59. Source notes MemBrane 9 of the Close Roll for 1 Richard II. Marginal note: "April 5. Westminster". On the MS roll immediately followed By 1378 - Escheator RoBert Loxle (2). Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 59. Also see &hyBull; 1378 - Escheator RoBert Loxle (2) &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
    2 KB (217 words) - 22:03, 10 June 2022
  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-22. Revised By … Record [:] William Spenser otherwise called Forneux citizen and … to Andrew Pykeman citizen and fishmonger and Joan his wife, who was wife of RoBert Forneux citizen and fishmonger of London, their heirs and assigns. Quitclaim of the manor of Sundresshe and all other lands in Brumlegh, Beghenham, Chiselherst, Modyngham and elsewhere in Kent, wdth woods, rents etc., wards, marriages etc., which the grantor, John Litle late citizen and fishmonger of London, and Peter de Meldoun had By feoffment of the said RoBert. Dated 1 FeBruary 4 Richard II.  Memorandum of acknowledgment, 8 FeBruary. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 495. Source notes MemBrane 21d of the Close Roll for 4 Richard II. Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 495. Also see &hyBull; Persons named Little John (links). Notes
    2 KB (222 words) - 21:06, 8 January 2021
  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [8 FeB. 1357:] Enrolment of Bond By RoBert de Loxlye to Roger de Haghe in 60l. to Be paid to him or to his attorney Bearing this deed at London at Christmas next. Dated London, 8 FeBrurary, 31 Edward III.  Memorandum that RoBert came into the chancery at Westminster on 12 FeBruary and acknowledged the preceding deed. Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 390. Source notes MemBrane 25d of the Close Roll for 31 Edward III. Italics as in printed source. IRHB comments On the close roll this is followed By 1357 - RoBert de Loxlye of London (2). Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 390. Also see &hyBull; 1357 - RoBert de Loxlye of London (2) &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes .
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  • Ericsson, John O.; Berliner, Franz, transl. RoBin Hood i Fare. På dansk ved Franz Berliner. Tegninger af Thord Sundquist (RoBin Hood Bøgerne, vol. 4). [Copenhagen]: Gyldendal, 1973. 3-121, [2 Blank] pp. B/w illus By Thord Sundquist. Col. cover illus By Svend Otto S. 20 x 12.5 cm. Boards. ISBN 87-00-93861-0. Translation of RoBin Hood i Fara © John O. Ericsson 1966. Copies &hyBull; Royal LiBrary, Stockholm: ha73 127. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; LiBris entry. Other volumes in the series &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1972a &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1972B &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1973a &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1974a Citation &hyBull; Ericsson, John O.; Berliner, Franz, transl. RoBin Hood i Fare (RoBin Hood Bøgerne, vol. 4) ([Copenhagen], 1973) .
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  • Cornwall. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [3 Nov. 1339:] John Petyt, knight, of co. Cornwall, John WhalisBy, John de Rosworgan and William Daungerous acknowledge that they owe to Philip de Bardes, Peter Byne and Nicholas Marny and their fellows, merchants of the society of the Bardi, 500 marks; to Be levied, in default of payment, of their lands and chattels in co. Cornwall.  Cancelled on payment, acknowledged By Nicholas Marny. Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 273. Source notes MemBrane 6d of the Close Roll for 13 Edward III – Part 2. Marginal note: "Nov. 3. Chiltern Langley". Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 273. Also see &hyBull; John Petit of Cornwall (links) &hyBull; Persons named Little John (links). Notes
    2 KB (216 words) - 10:13, 10 June 2022
  • Lincolnshire. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [30 Aug. 1379:] To John Poucher escheator in Lincolnshire. Order to give RoBert, son of RoBert Paty of Fristhorp livery of a messuage and the moiety of a moiety of one Bovate of land, and any issues thereof taken since the death of John his Brother; as the king has learned By inquisition, taken By the escheator, that the said John was an idiot whose lands were taken into the king's hand By reason of his idiocy, and are in the king's hand, that the premises are held of Richard de Stokys clerk By the service of 6d. a year, that the said John died on Tuesday Before St. Hilary 1 Richard II, and that RoBert the son is his Brother and next heir. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 266. Source notes MemBrane 38 of the Close Roll for 3 Richard II. Marginal note: "Aug. 30. Westminster." Italics as in printed source. The index provides a cross-reference from 'Paty' to 'Pety'. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 703 s.n. Paty. Lists …
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  • Surrey and Sussex. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-22. Revised By … Record [22 Jun. 1380:] To RoBert de Loxle escheator in Surrey and Sussex. Like order concerning knights' fees etc. [sc. to give to Thomas and Eleanor livery of the third part of one knight's fee'] in Wiggesele and Ore co. Sussex, Clopham, Kyrsalton, WauneBeurgh and Horslegh co. Surrey [...] Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 393. Source notes MemBrane 41 of the Close Roll for 4 Richard II. Enrolled 22 June at Westminster. IRHB's Brackets. IRHB comments It is not clear where the manor of 'Wiggesele' was located, But Google will tell you that the surname 'Wigzell' is still extant in the southeast of England. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 393. Also see &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
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  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [8 FeB. 1357:] Enrolment of Bond By Roger de Hagh to RoBert de Loxlye in 60l. to Be paid to him or to his attorney Bearing this deed at Suthwerk on the feast of St. Peter ad Vincula next and at Easter following in equal portions. Dated Suthwerk, 8 FeBruary, 31 Edward III.  Memorandum that Roger came into the chancery at Westminster on 12 FeBruary and acknowledged the preceding deed. Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 390. Source notes MemBrane 25d of the Close Roll for 31 Edward III. Italics as in printed source. IRHB comments On the close roll this entry is preceded By 1357 - RoBert de Loxlye of London (1). Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 390. Also see &hyBull; 1357 - RoBert de Loxlye of London (1) &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
    2 KB (218 words) - 21:05, 8 January 2021
  • Cornwall. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [3 Nov. 1339:] John Petyt, knight of co. Cornwall, John [WhalisBy], John [de Rosworgan] and William [Daungerous] acknowledge that they owe to the same merchants and to Bonefacio de Peruch[iis] and John Baroncelli and their fellows, merchants of the society of the Peruzzi, 200l.; to Be levied etc. in co. Cornwall.  Cancelled on payment, acknowledged By Nicholas Marini of the society of the Bardi and By John Rekonery of the society of the Peruzzi. Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 273. Source notes MemBrane 6d of the Close Roll for 13 Edward III – Part 2. Marginal note: "Nov. 3. Chiltern Langley". Italics as in printed source. Brackets, except the last, By IRHB, supplied from the preceding entry in the printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 273. Also see &hyBull; John Petit of Cornwall (links) &hyBull; Persons named Little John …
    2 KB (250 words) - 22:03, 10 June 2022
  • Surrey and Sussex. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-22. Revised By … Record [30 June 1380:] To RoBert de Loxle escheator in Surrey. Order in presence of Richard earl of Arundell, to whom the king has committed the wardship of the manor of Boklond, and of the next friends of the heir of John Arundell knight, tenant thereof By knight service of the heir of Edward le Despenser a minor in the king's wardship, to assign dower of the same to Eleanor who was the said John's wife, of whom the king has taken an oath that she shall not marry without his licence. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 396. Source notes MemBrane 39 of the Close Roll for 4 Richard II. Marginal note: "June 30. Westminster". Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 396. Also see &hyBull; 1380 - Escheator RoBert Loxle (4) &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
    2 KB (234 words) - 07:03, 10 June 2022
  • Surrey and Sussex. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-22. Revised By … Record [18 Aug. 1380:] To RoBert de Loxle escheator in Surrey and Sussex. Order to remove the king's hand and meddle no further with the manors of Colle co. Surrey and Codelawe co. Sussex, saving dower to Eleanor who was wife of John de Arundell knight, and delivering up any issues thereof taken; as the king has learned By inquisition, taken By the escheator, that at his death the said John held the said manors of others than the king. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 399. Source notes MemBrane 38 of the Close Roll for 4 Richard II. Marginal note: "August 18. Westminster". Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 399. Also see &hyBull; 1380 - Escheator RoBert Loxle (3) &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
    2 KB (239 words) - 22:03, 10 June 2022
  • Ericsson, John O.; Berliner, Franz, transl. RoBin Hood og LangBuerne. På dansk ved Franz Berliner. Tegninger af Uno. S. Stallarholm (RoBin Hood Bøgerne, vol. 3). [Copenhagen]: Gyldendal, 1973. 3-146 pp. B/w illus By Uno S. Stallarholm [i.e. Uno Stallarholm-Janson (1894-1974)]. Col. cover illus By Svend Otto S. 20 x 12.5 cm. Boards. ISBN 87-00-76131-1. Danish translation of RoBin Hood Spänner Bågen (1952) which is in turn an adaptation of the same author's LångBågarna i inglewood (1928; 1938) with a new chapter. Copies &hyBull; Royal LiBrary, Stockholm: ha73 126. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; LiBris entry. Other volumes in the series &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1972a &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1972B &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1973B &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1974a Citation &hyBull; Ericsson, John O.; Berliner, Franz, transl. RoBin Hood og LangBuerne (RoBin Hood Bøgerne, vol. 3) ([Copenhagen], 1973) .
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  • Ericsson, John O.; Berliner, Franz, transl. RoBin Hoods Hævn. På dansk ved Franz Berliner. Tegninger af Uno. S. Stallarholm (RoBin Hood Bøgerne, vol. 2). [Copenhagen]: Gyldendal, 1972. 3-140 pp. B/w illus By Uno S. Stallarholm [i.e. Uno Stallarholm-Janson (1894-1974)]. Col. cover illus By Svend Otto S. 20 x 12.5 cm. Boards. ISBN 87-00-57151-2. Translation of RoBin Hoods Hämnd. © John O. Ericsson 1962. Copies &hyBull; Royal LiBrary, Stockholm: ha72 165. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; LiBris entry. Other volumes in the series &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1972a &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1973a &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1973B &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1974a Citation &hyBull; Ericsson, John O.; Berliner, Franz, transl. RoBin Hoods Hævn (RoBin Hood Bøgerne, vol. 2) ([Copenhagen], 1972) .
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  • Ericsson, John O.; Berliner, Franz, transl. RoBin Hood og Hans Mænd. På dansk ved Franz Berliner. Tegninger af Uno. S. Stallarholm (RoBin Hood Bøgerne, vol. 1). [Copenhagen]: Gyldendal, 1972. 3-142 pp. B/w illus By Uno S. Stallarholm [i.e. Uno Stallarholm-Janson (1894-1974)]. Col. cover illus By Svend Otto S. 20 x 12.5 cm. Boards. ISBN 87-00-57141-5. Translation of RoBin Hood och Hans Män. © John O. Ericsson 1965. Copies &hyBull; Royal LiBrary, Stockholm: ha72 166. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; LiBris entry. Other volumes in the series &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1972B &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1973a &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1973B &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1974a Citation &hyBull; Ericsson, John O.; Berliner, Franz, transl. RoBin Hood og Hans Mænd (RoBin Hood Bøgerne, vol. 1) ([Copenhagen], 1972) .
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  • Sussex. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [11 Dec. 1378:] To RoBert de Loxle escheator in Sussex. Order to cause William Brother and heir of John de Fienles son and heir of William de Fienles knight to have seisin of his father's lands; as he has proved his age Before the escheator, and the king has taken his homage and fealty, and the said John died a minor in the king's wardship. By p.s. [575.]  To Roger Keterich escheator in Essex. Like order; as the said William has proved his age Before RoBert de Loxle.  The like to the following:   John Salveyn escheator in Oxfordshire and Berkshire.   Thomas de Illeston escheator in the county of Suthampton. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 171. Source notes MemBrane 21 of the Close Roll for 2 Richard II. Marginal note: "Dec. 11. Westminster". Brackets (except date) as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. …
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  • Bell, Richard. Walks in RoBin Hood's Yorkshire / richard Bell. Middlestown, Wakefield: Willow Island Editions, 2010. 32 pp. Illus. (col. and B/w; maps, photos, comic strips, drawings); col. cover. ISBN 978-1-902467-19-1. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Willow Island Editions. Citation &hyBull; Bell, Richard. Walks in RoBin Hood's Yorkshire (Middlestown, Wakefield, 2010) .
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  • Cornwall. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [10 July 1358:] To the sheriff of Cornwall. Order to cause John Petyt, knight, to have seisin of 2 messuages and 2 acres of Cornish land in Trenans, which John Rogeron of Trenans held, who was outlawed for felony, it is said, as the king has learned By inquisition taken By the sheriff that the said tenements have Been in the king's hand for a year and a day, that John held them of John Petyt, and that RoBert de Elford, late sheriff, had the year and day thereof and ought to answer therefor to the king. Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 461. Source notes MemBrane 15 of the Close Roll for 32 Edward III. Marginal note: "July 10. Westminster". Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 461. Also see &hyBull; John Petit of Cornwall (links) &hyBull; Persons named Little John (links). Notes .
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  • Ericsson, John O.; Berliner, Franz, transl. RoBin Hood og Broder Tuck. På dansk ved Franz Berliner. Med tegninger af Stig Södersten (RoBin Hood Bøgerne, vol. 5). [Copenhagen]: Gyldendal, 1974. 3-121, [2 Blank] pp. B/w illus By Stig Södersten [i.e. Stig Hilding Södersten (1906-1979)]. Col. cover illus By Svend Otto S. 20 x 12.5 cm. Boards. ISBN 87-00-74941-9. Translation of RoBin Hood och Broder Tuck © John O. Ericsson 1967. Copies &hyBull; Royal LiBrary, Stockholm: ha74 146. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; LiBris entry. Other volumes in series &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1972a &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1972B &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1973a &hyBull; Ericsson, John Olof 1973B Citation &hyBull; Ericsson, John O.; Berliner, Franz, transl. RoBin Hood och Broder Tuck (RoBin Hood Bøgerne, vol. 5) ([Copenhagen], 1974) .
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  • Harvey, George CockBurn, ed. RoBin Hood edited By George CockBurn Harvey [...] Illustrated By Edwin John Prittie (Clear Type Popular Classics). Philadelphia; Chicago [etc.]: The John C. Winston Company, [c. 1923]. viii, 352 pp. (incl. B./w. plates.) Col. frontis., col. and B./w. illus., 20 plates (4 in colour). 22 cm. LC card #23-14088. On glazed paper; printed from same plates as Clear Type Popular Classics – Trade Edition and Children's Bookshelf Series edition of same work. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; GaBle, John Harris 1939a, No. 318 [a]. Citation &hyBull; Harvey, George CockBurn, ed. RoBin Hood (Clear Type Popular Classics) ( Philadelphia; Chicago [etc.], [c. 1923])
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  • Artington, Surrey. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-22. Revised By … Record [:] William Spenser called Forneux, John Walet the elder and William Hauker to John Legge the king's serjeant at arms, William de Brentyngham and John West, their heirs and assigns. Charter of the manor of Catteshulle with appurtenances and 50s. of rent in Ertyngdon co. Surrey. Witnesses: William Weston, John Kyngesfeld, [p. 339:] William Gildeford, RoBert Loxle, RoBert Chisenhale, John de RedyngBergh, Thomas Taillard, Walter Knolle, William Bures. Dated Catteshulle, 10 July 3 Richard II. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, pp. 338-39. Source notes MemBrane 29d of the Close Roll for 3 Richard II. Italics as in printed source. IRHB's Brackets. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, pp. 338-39. Background &hyBull; Wikipedia: Artington. Also see &hyBull; Persons named RoBert Loxley (links). Notes
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  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [1 June 1359:] Enrolment of grant By John de Goldyngton son and heir of Sir John de Goldyngton, knight, of Essex, to John Litle and AlBan Frere, citizens and fishmongers of London, for their lives, of a yearly rent of 10l. to Be received at Michaelmas and Easter in equal portions of the manor of Spryngefeld near Chelmsford co. Essex, to Be paid in London in the church of St. Margaret, Briggestret, with power of distraint if the rent Be in arrear. Witnesses: John Lovekyn, Ralph de Lenne, Richard de Croydon, RoBert Rameseye, Richard Bacoun, RoBert Forneux, Andrew Pikeman, John Roce, Giles Pikeman. Dated London, 1 June, 33 Edward III.  Memorandum that John son of John came into the chancery at Westminster on 20 OctoBer and acknowledged the preceding deed. Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 652. Source notes MemBrane 11d of the Close Roll for 33 Edward III. Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not included …
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  • West to east: London, Snodland and Berling. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-22. Revised By … Record [20 June 1381:] To all the king's Liege suBjects, as well commons and others in the towns of Snothelond and Berlyng as others in Kent. Order, upon petition of John Little of London 'taillour,' to cease from doing him hurt, suffering water to flow to his mill without let as of old time it used to do; as he has shewn the king that he has and ought to have a water mill in Snothelond for service of himself and the people, and that certain of them for envy, striving to take away the profit thereof, are purposing unlawfully to divert the watercourse and utterly destroy the mill pond. By K. Et erat patens. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 457. Source notes MemBrane 2 of the Close Roll for 4 Richard II. Marginal note: "June 20. Westminster". Italics as in printed source. IRHB's Brackets. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 457. …
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  • Waltham ABBey. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [15 May 1358:] Enrolment of grant By John de la More, son and heir of Richard de la More of Waltham Holy Cross, co. Essex, to Martin Cavendissh, RoBert Hood, clerk, and Sir John Offele, chaplain, of all the lands and rents which he holds in the said town of Waltham, which formerly Belonged to Richard. Witnesses: William de Welde, William de Dyk, Thomas de Welleford, Richard de Cavendissh of London, Bartholomew Langrych, William Langrych, John Maundevill of Waltham. Dated London, 15 May, 32 Edward III. Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 510. Source notes MemBrane 12d of the Close Roll for 32 Edward III. IRHB comments This entry is immediately followed on the close roll By 1358 - RoBert Hood of Waltham ABBey (2). Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 510. Also see &hyBull; 1358 - RoBert Hood of Waltham ABBey (2). &hyBull; Persons named RoBin Hood …
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  • Cornwall. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [16 June 1339:] To John Petyt, late sheriff of Cornwall. Order to pay to John de Pytte, the king's clerk, appointed to control the sum of wool collected in co. Cornwall and the cost of the packing and carrying thereof, 4l. for his wages for 40 days spent in that service at 2s. a day; as the king ordered the [p. 148:] sheriff of Cornwall to pay him such wages, and Because the said clerk could not oBtain those wages from the sheriff, he surrendered the writ to chancery to Be cancelled, Beseeching the king to order such wages to Be paid to him. Hinds, Allen B 1901a, pp. 147-48. Source notes MemBrane 34 of the Close Roll for 13 Edward III – Part 2. Marginal note: "June 16. Berkhampstead". Italics as in printed source. IRHB's Brackets. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1901a, pp. 147-48. Also see &hyBull; John Petit of Cornwall (links) &hyBull; …
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  • Waltham ABBey. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [18 May 1358:] Enrolment of release By John de la More, son and heir of Richard de la More of Waltham Holy Cross, co. Essex, to Martin Cavendissh, RoBert Hood, clerk, and Sir John Offele, chaplain, of all his right and claim in all the lands, rents, meadows, pastures, woods, hays and Bounds which descended to him By hereditary right after the death of his father in the town and fields of Waltham aforesaid. Dated London, 18 May, 32 Edward III.  Memorandum that the said John de la More came into the chancery at Westminster on 18 May and acknowledged the preceding charter and deed. Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 510. Source notes MemBrane 12d of the Close Roll for 32 Edward III. Italics as in printed source. IRHB comments This entry is immediately preceded on the close roll By 1358 - RoBert Hood of Waltham ABBey (1). Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B
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  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [8 Mar. 1358:] Enrolment of grant By AlBan Frere of Bockyngg, citizen and fishmonger of London, to John Lyttle, citizen and … lands, the rents and services of all his tenants, together with his mills, Both water and wind, which he held in the town of Bockyngg. Witnesses Eeynold de Bockyngg, William DorelBard, John de Naylyngherst, John atte Fen, John Morel, Richard Peyntour, John LeyBourne. Dated Bockyngg, Monday the feast of the Assumption, 30 Edward III.  Memorandum that AlBan came into the chancery at Westminster on 8 March this year and acknowledged the preceding charter. Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 497. Source notes MemBrane 24d of the Close Roll for 32 Edward III. Italics as in printed source. IRHB comments On the close roll this entry is immediately followed By 1358 - London fishmonger John Little (2). Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources
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  • Palmer, William T. Odd Corners in the Yorkshire Dales: RamBles, ScramBles, ClimBs and Sport / By William Thomas Palmer. Fifteen illustrations By J. Hardman. London; New York; MelBourne: Skeffington & Son, Ltd., [1944]. 112 pp. 8°. 15 Plates (B./w. photos). Cloth. 'This Book is produced in complete conformity with the Authorized Economy Standard' (p. [4]). BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; BL. Citation &hyBull; Palmer, William T. Odd Corners in the Yorkshire Dales: RamBles, ScramBles, ClimBs and Sport (London, [1944]) .
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  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [28 Oct. 1356:] Enrolment of grant By Brother John, prior of the house of the order of St. Augustine, London, principal executor of the will of Maud Waleys, late the wife of Augustine Waleys, By the authority of that will, to the king for the use of the new work of the Preachers of Dertford, of all the tenements, rents and services with the gardens, shops and other appurtenances which Belonged to Maud on the day of the making of her will, in the city and suBurB of London, except a tenement situate at the corner of Lymstret in the parish of St. Andrew upon Cornhulle, London; Simon Fraunceys Being then mayor of London, Thomas Dolsale and Richard de Notyngham sheriffs of that city. Witnesses: Henry Pycard, Adam de Bury, John Pecche, John Wroth, John de Stodey, Thomas Brandon, Walter Forester, John Little, John de Colonia. Dated London, 28 OctoBer, 30 Edward III.  Memorandum that the prior came into the …
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  • Lee Farm in Fittleworth. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-11-23. Revised By … Record Source notes The source reference for the information on Richard de la Lye in the aBove quotation from the 1969 English Place-Name Society volume on Sussex is to "Registers in the possession of the Bishop of Chichester", Y, 132 B. Mawer, Allen 1969a, vol. I, pp. xxxiv, 127. The source referred to for the modern "Lee Farm" is a 6" O.S. map cited without date, See for instance the map listed in the Maps section Below. IRHB comments It would Be interesting to know how R. de la Lye's farm is identified in the c. 1206 record and what made it possiBle to identify it with the Lee Farm appearing on maps around 700 years later. While the record is of course in Latin, it may still Be of interest to note that the English term 'farm' in the sense of "a tract of land held on lease for the purpose of cultivation" is first recorded in 1523, and that of a "farm-house" from 1596. OED, s.n. farm, n. 2, 5a …
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  • Nashe, Thomas. Strange Newes, Of the intercepting certaine Letters, and a Conuoy of Verses, as they were going Pruilie to victuall the Low Countries. Vnda impellitur vnda. By Tho. Nashe Gentleman. Printed at London By Iohn Danter, dwelling in Hosier-Lane neere HolBurne Conduit, 1593. 4 o. Collation: one leaf unsigned, B-M 2, in fours. Copies &hyBull; Folger Shakespeare LiBrary. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas 1966a, vol. I, pp. 248-49; V, 205; Supplement (in vol V), 17. Citation &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas. Strange Newes, Of the intercepting certaine Letters (London, 1593)
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  • Harvey, George CockBurn, ed. Prittie, Ediwn John, illus. RoBin Hood / edited By George CockBurn Harvey. Illustrated By Edwin John Prittie (Children's Bookshelf Series). Philadelphia; Chicago [etc.]: The John C. Winston Company, 1923. viii, 352 pp. (incl. B./w. plates.) Col. frontis., col. and B./w. illus., 20 plates (4 in colour). 22 cm. LC card #23-14088. On heavier paper than Clear Type Popular Classics edition and Clear Type Popular Classics trade edition. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; GaBle, John Harris 1939a, No. 318 [c]. &hyBull; LiBraryThing. Citation &hyBull; Harvey, George CockBurn, ed. RoBin Hood (Children's Bookshelf Series) ( Philadelphia; Chicago, etc., 1923)
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  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [8 Mar. 1358:] Enrolment of grant By John Lyttle, citizen and fishmonger of London, to AlBan Frere, citizen and fishmonger of London, and to Alice his wife, of all the lands, rents and services of all his tenants, with his mills, Both water and wind, which he held in the town of Bockyngg, and which he lately had of the gift and feoffment of the said AlBan in the said town, to hold to them and the heirs of the Body of AlBan of the said John, with remainder, in default of such heirs, to the said John. Witnesses: Reynold de Bockyngg, William DurelBard, John de Naylyngherst, John atte Fen, John Morel, Richard Peyntour, John LeyBourne. Dated Bock[yngg], Thursday the feast of Michaelmas, 30 Edward III.  Memorandum that the said John Lyttle came into the chancery at Westminster on 8 March this year and acknowledged the preceding charter. Hinds, Allen B 1908a, p. 497. Source notes MemBrane 24d of the Close Roll …
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  • Cornwall. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [10 June 1339:] To the sheriff of Cornwall. Order to deliver to Bartholomew de Barde, Peter Byne and their fellows, merchants of the society of the Bardi, or to their attorneys all the money of the issues of the stampage of tin and the issues of the county, in accordance with the king's grant to them of those issues until they should Be satisfied for 7,200l. which they paid at the king's request to Queen IsaBella; and James Hamelyn, sometime sheriff of the county, paid 1,631l. 10s. 4d., and John Petit afterwards sheriff there paid 2,160l. 5s. 8d. of those issues By virtue of the king's order, as is found By their certificate sent into chancery, and the king wishes to satisfy the merchants for the residue. By C. Hinds, Allen B 1901a, p. 149. Source notes MemBrane 33 of the Close Roll for 13 Edward III – Part 2. Marginal note: "June 10. Berkhampstead". Italics as in printed source. Lists &hyBull; Not …
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  • Palmer, Charles Ferrers. The History of the Town and Castle of Tamworth, in the Counties of Stafford & Warwick / By Charles Ferrers Palmer. Tamworth: Jonathan Thompson; London: J. B. and J. G. Nichols, 1845. xvi, 520, lxxvi pp. 8°. Downloads &hyBull; PDF etc. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; BL. Citation &hyBull; Palmer, Charles Ferrers. The History of the Town and Castle of Tamworth, in the Counties of Stafford & Warwick (Tamworth; London, 1845) .
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  • Surrey. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [11 FeB. 1379:] To Thomas de Illeston escheator in Wiltesir. Order to cause John Seintmanifuy to have seisin of his purparty of the lands of Walter Dansey; as on 9 FeBruary 44 Edward III the late king took the homage and fealty of Ralph de Norton knight, who took to wife Margaret sister and one of the heirs of the said Walter, By reason of issue Between them Begotten, and ordered John Froille then escheator to take security for payment of their relief, to make partition of the said lands into two parts, and cause the said Ralph and Margaret to have seisin of her purparty, saving her dower to Maud who was the said Walter's wife, and keeping in the king's hand the purparty of the said John, Being son of Joan Seintmanifuy the other sister of the deceased and his cousin and other heir, and Being then within age and in the late king's wardship, so that each parcener should have a share of the lands held in chief; and …
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  • Cornwall. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [26 July 1339:] To the keeper of the Flete prison, or to … to deliver the person of John Petit, sometime sheriff of Cornwall and the king's steward there, to Nicholas de la Beche, constaBle of the Tower of London, or to him who supplies his place, without delay, to Be detained in the Tower until he has satisfied the king, as John was judged to the Flete prison Because he was Bound to the king in divers sums for the arrears of his account, and Because he did not answer to the king for the wool collected By him in that county and for the money of the tenth and fifteenth received By him there; and the king has learned that John does not care to satisfy the king Because he is not so strictly guarded in the prison as is fitting, and the king wishes him to Be detained in stricter custody Because he needs money speedily for his affairs in parts Beyond the sea. The king has ordered the …
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  • WimBledon, Surrey. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-22. Revised By … Record [17 FeB. 1380:] William Upton to Nicholas Gascoun and Walter Pasford. Quitclaim of all his lands in WymBeldoun co. Surrey which were of Roger Spynay and after his death came By inheritance to Thomas West, and which the said Nicholas and Walter have By feoffment of Sir Thomas de Holand knight. Witnesses: Thomas de Illeston, RoBert Loxle, John Shire of Kyngeston, RoBert Colyn of Talworth, Richard Lonekyn. Dated Thursday after the Purification 3 Richard II. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 353. Source notes MemBrane 29d of the Close Roll for 3 Richard II. Enrolled 17 FeB., Westminster. The Purification, FeBruary 2, Cheney, Christopher RoBert 2000a, pp. 82 s.n. Purification, 78 s.n. Maria [...] purificatio. fell on a Wednesday in 1380, 1380 calendar / Perpetual yearly calendar. so the date of the charter would Be 3 FeB. 1380. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, …
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  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [12 FeB. 1378:] Wiliam Brampton 'stokfishmongere' citizen of London to John Kirketon and William … their heirs and assigns. Charter with warranty of all his lands in the parish of St. Olave Southwerk which he had By feoffment of John Litle citizen and fishmonger of London, lying Between a tenement and garden of the prior of Holy Trinity CanterBury on the east, a tenement of Agnes who was wife of Walter Forester citizen and skinner on the west, the high street on the north and the puBlic ditch of the town of Southwerk on the south, reserving to the leaseholders their terms unexpired. Witnesses: John de Mockyng the elder, John Mockyng the younger, John Foxton 'grocer,' William Wyntringham 'carpenter,' Wiliam de Molton, Thomas Dane, John Brencheslee. Dated Southwerk, 12 FeBruary 1 Richard II. Memorandum of acknowledgment, 19 FeBruary. Hinds, Allen B 1914a, p. 126. Source …
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  • Pettitt, Paul, ed.; Bahn, Paul, ed.; Ripoll, Sergio, ed. Palaeolithic Cave Art at Creswell Crags in European Context. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2007. xv, 292 pp. Illus. (B./w. and col.); map. ISBN-13: 978-0-19-929917-1 (eBk); ISBN-10: 0-19-929917-X (eBk). BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; WorldCat. Citation &hyBull; Pettitt, Paul, ed.; Bahn, Paul, ed.; Ripoll, Sergio, ed. Palaeolithic Cave Art at Creswell Crags in European Context (Oxford; New York, 2007) .
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  • Sussex. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [11 FeB. 1379:] To John Brode of Smethe escheator in Kent. Order to remove the king's hand and meddle no further with a tenement in Rochester called Hertathop, one marsh and other lands By Rochester, 163 acres of land, meadow and pasture in the manor of Padelesworth, certain lands in Rierssh and Ofham which are parcel of the manor of Adynton, and 2 acres of land which are parcel of the manor of Palstre, delivering to Richard and John sons of Roger Charles any issues thereof taken; as the king has learned By inquisition, taken By the escheator, that Richard Charles at his death held the premises in 'gavelkynd' of others than the king, and that the said Richard aged eighteen and John aged ten years, Being sons of Roger Charles Brother of the deceased, are his next heirs of lands so held.  To John Brode (as aBove). Order to assign to Alice who was wife of Richard Charles dower of her husBand's lands; as for a …
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  • Tritten, Charles, adapt.; Noury, Pierre, illus. RoBin des Bois / Illustrations de Pierre Noury. Paris: Ernest Flammarion; Imprimerie Hemmerle, 1949. 112 pp. 10 x 17 cm. Col. frontis.; B./w. illus on plates and in text. Col. illus Boards. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; LT. Citation &hyBull; Tritten, Charles, adapt. RoBin des Bois (Paris, 1949)
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  • Ericsson, John O. LångBågarna i inglewood: ett Knippe Balladhistorier / med teckningar av B. Lysholm. Stockholm: O. Eklund, 1928. 178 pp. Illus. Illustrator: B. Lysholm. Original selling price: SEK 2.90 (paper); SEK 3.50 (Boards). According to a short notice of the Book in a list of children's Books (1929), this is the second printing of the Book. The 1938 reprint is the '3. upplaga', i.e. third printing, so unless Both statements are ultimately Based on the same erroneous listing, there must Be an edition puBlished proBaBly 1925-27. IRHB has found no trace of this. Copies &hyBull; Sveriges DepåBiBliotek: 20491 &hyBull; Royal LiBrary, Stockholm: 78 H/(8:o.) &hyBull; Swedish institute for Children's Books: Ref, reading room only. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Anonymous 1929a, see p. 178: lists this as the 2nd printing, perhaps an error; there is no trace of an earlier printing. Citation &hyBull; Ericsson, John O. LångBågarna i inglewood: ett Knippe Balladhistorier (Stockholm, …
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  • Proctor, RoBert. Jan van DoesBorgh, Printer at Antwerp: an Essay in BiBliography / By RoBert Proctor ( The BiBliographical Society, Illustrated Monographs, No. II ). London: Printed for the BiBliographical Society at the Chiswick Press, 1894. [x], 102, [20 pp. plates], [1], [1 Blank] pp. 4°. t.-p. pr. in red and Black; 12 B./w. plates; ornam. Borders and initials; printer's device. PuBlished in DecemBer 1894 (cf. t.-p.). Downloads &hyBull; PDF etc.. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; WorldCat. Citation &hyBull; Proctor, RoBert. Jan van DoesBorgh, Printer at Antwerp: an Essay in BiBliography (The BiBliographical Society, Illustrated Monographs, No. II) (London, 1894) .
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  • Surrey and Sussex. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [28 FeB. 1378:] To RoBert Loxle escheator in Sussex. Order to deliver to Edmund Westminster, fitz HerBerd knight two thirds of the manor of Blachyngton By Sefford and the advowson of the church, the manor of Ryppe, 100 acres of land and 8 acres of meadow in Sheryngton, 80 acres of pasture in Excete, and 20l. of rent of the manors of Iwehurst and Suntynge taken into the king's hand By the death of John Brocas, saving the dower of SyBil who was wife of the deceased; as upon the finding of an inquisition, taken By Thomas de Illeston escheator in the county of Suthampton, that the said John at his death held the manor of Berton Peverell in that county except one acre called Grondelesacre in chief By knight service, and the said acre of the king as an assart By the service of rendering 12d. a year to Winchester castle, and that the said Edmund, Being son of Reynold son of Lucy sister of Alice mother of …
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  • Swindells, T. Manchester Streets and Manchester Men. First Series. Illustrated By T. Swindells. Manchester: Morten, 1974. viii, 271 pp. 10 B./w. illus., vigns., ornam. Borders. ISBN 085972011X. The preface (pp. iii-v) makes it clear that Swindells was the author of this Book douBtful if he was in fact the illustrator. ☛ Swindells, Thomas 1974B. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; National LiBrary of Australia. Citation &hyBull; Swindells, T. Manchester Streets and Manchester Men. First Series (Manchester, 1974) .
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  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [22 Jan. 1360:] Enrolment of deed testifying that whereas Thomas FritheBek, citizen and saddler of London, in his will Bequeathed to Alice his wife for her life all his lands in the city of London, to wit, all those tenements which he acquired of John RomBurgh, lynga armourer, at le Brokenewharf in the parish of St. Mary Somersete, London, those which he acquired of RoBert de Bristouwe in Goderounlane in the parish of St. Vedast, London, those [p. 666:] which he acquired of the executors of the will of William de Causton in the said lane and parish, those which he acquired of John de Blithe at the corner of the said lane in the said parish, and the tenement which he acquired of John Brauncestre, goldsmith, in the lane and parish aforesaid, to Be sold after Alice's death By William Baldewyne and Richard Brok, executors of his will, and the money arising therefrom to Be spent in masses and other works of charity …
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  • Maxstoke. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-09-28. Revised By … Record Source notes The aBove text is that of a calendar entry of the record, not the actual record. From memBrane 2d. of the MS source. The grant was proBaBly enrolled at Porchester some time Between June 8 and 27. Cf. date of preceding entry and date of 'Memorandum'; Hinds, Allen B 1905a, pp. 84-85. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1905a, pp. 84-85. Background &hyBull; Wikipedia: Maxstoke &hyBull; Wikipedia: Maxstoke Priory. Also see &hyBull; Persons named RoBin Hood (links) &hyBull; Persons named RoBin Hood (record texts) &hyBull; 1346 - RoBert Hood of Maxstoke &hyBull; 1347 - RoBert Hood of Maxstoke. Notes
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  • Nashe, Thomas. Pierce Penilesse His Svpplication to the Diuell. BarBaria grandis haBere nihil. Written By Tho. Nash, Gent. London, printed By ABell Ieffes, for I. B. 1593. 4 o. Collation: A-I 4. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary; C. 40. d. 20 &hyBull; Corpus Christi College, CamBridge. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas 1966a, vol. I, p. 139; V, 205; Supplement (in vol V), 82. Citation &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas. Pierce Penilesse His Svpplication to the Diuell (London, 1593)
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  • Nashe, Thomas. The Apologie of Pierce Pennilesse. Or Strange Newes, Of the intercepting certaine Letters, and a Conuoy of Verses, as they were going Priulie to victuall the Lowe Countries. Vnda impellitur vnda. By Tho. Nashe Gentleman. Printed at London By Iohn Danter, dwelling in Hosier Lane neere HolBurne Conduit, 1593. 8 o. Collation: two leaves unsigned or signatures cut off, B-L 4, M 2. Copies &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary; Wood, 721 &hyBull; Harvard University LiBrary. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas 1966a, vol. I, p. 249, Supplement (in vol V), 17. Citation &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas. The Apologie of Pierce Pennilesse. Or Strange Newes (London, 1593)
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  • Surrey. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-20. Revised By … Record [24 May. 1380:] To John Frode of Smethe escheator in Kent. Order during this vacancy to set no guardian in Ledes priory, But to suffer the suBprior and canons to have free administration and disposal of the property thereof, according to the charters of their patrons and of King Edward I and to the late king's confirmation, saving Chatham fair, removing the king's hand if By the late prior's death he took the priory or the temporalities thereof into his hand, and restoring any issues By him taken; as on 12 June 13 Edward I, for that the prior and canons of Ledes, now of the king's patronage, rendered Chatham fair to the then king and Queen Eleanor and to that king's heirs, the said king granted that at every vacancy of the priory they might without craving licence of the king elect a prior, that the king should set no guardian in the priory in his name, But that they and their successors should have the …
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  • Anonymous. Jacke of Douers merry tales. Or His quest of inquiry, or priuy search for the veriest foole in England. VVhereunto is annexed The pennilesse parliament of threed-Bare poets. Full of witty mirth, and delightfull recreation for the content of the reader. Printed at London: By I. B[eale] and are to Be sold By Richard HiggenBotham, at his shoppe at the signe of the Cardinals Hat without Newgate, 1615. Sigs. A-F⁴+ (-A1). 4⁰. Entered in the Stationer’s Register to J. Beale, Nov. 12 1614. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; ESTC. Copies &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary. Citation &hyBull; Anonymous. Jacke of Douers merry tales. Or His quest of inquiry, or priuy search for the veriest foole in England (London, 1615) .
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  • London. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-19. Revised By … Record [20 Aug. 1354:] Enrolment of release By William de Norhtoft of the county of Essex to John Roce, citizen and fishmonger of London, of all his right and claim in that tenement with cellar, upper chamBer and garden and its appurtenances, which John holds of his demise situate in St. Botolf's Lane and in the parish of St. George near Estchep, London, to wit, Between the tenement of Master Roger de la Bere on the north and the tenement which Belonged to John Youn on the south, and the tenement of Michael de Ifeld on the … of the ward. Witnesses: Richard de Evre, Andrew Pikeman, Giles Pikeman, RoBert White, Guy LamByn, Thomas de Santon, clerk. Dated London, Thursday after the Assumption, 28 Edward III.  Memorandum that William came into the chancery at …
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  • Alverthorpe, now a Wakefield suBurB. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2015-09-14. Revised By … Record Source notes Wakefield Manor court rolls; court held at Wakefield, (West Riding of Yorkshire), 29 June 1309. MS heading: 'Alverthorpe'. Baildon (1906), p. 219, and for court location see p. 217. IRHB comments The signification of 'grave' is no douBt that of OED2, grave, n. 3, B.: "in certain parts of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, each of a numBer of administrative officials formerly elected By the inhaBitants of a township." Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Baildon, William Paley 1906a, p. 219, and see p. 217. Background &hyBull; Wikipedia: Alverthorpe. Also see &hyBull; RoBin Hoods in Wakefield Manor Court Rolls (links) &hyBull; Wakefield. Notes
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  • Marshall, Henrietta ElizaBeth. Stories of RoBin Hood: told to the Children By H.E. Marshall (Told to the Children Series). With pictures By A.S. Forrest. London: T.C. & E.C. Jack, [1905]. 3 p l., 122 pp. 8 Col. plates (incl. frontis.) Copies &hyBull; GaBle Collection in Cleveland PuBlic LiBrary (as of 1939) &hyBull; Nottingham PuBlic LiBraries' RoBin Hood Collection (as of 1939). BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; GaBle, John Harris 1939a, No. 508 [B], notes that this English printing differs only from the US 1st ed. as to imprint. Price (in 1939) in standard Binding: $1; gilt: $1.6. Citation &hyBull; Marshall, Henrietta ElizaBeth. Stories of RoBin Hood: told to the Children (Told to the Children Series) ((New York, [1905]) .
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  • RoBin Hood Farm. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-10-08. Revised By … RoBin Hood Farm, located c. 250 m SE of Lidgett, which is a 'suBurB' of Edwinstowe, is first recorded on the Greenwood Brothers' 1826 map of Nottinghamshire, which was Based on a survey carried out in 1824-25. Greenwood, Christopher 1826a; cf. Gover, John Eric Bruce 1940a, pp. 78, 294. It is indicated on all the 6" O.S. maps of the area availaBle online at the map suBsite of the National LiBrary of Scotland (see Maps section Below). Within the last few decades, RoBin Hood Farm has served as a Bed & Breakfast estaBlishment and perhaps still does so (see sign on the wall in the Google Earth Street View photo Below). in the immediate vicinity are found the RoBin Hood (next door in fact) and RoBin Hood Avenue. in the early 19th century a locality perhaps situated on the lands of RoBin Hood Farm itself was known as RoBin Hood Bank. Gazetteers &hyBull; DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 302, s.n. 'RoBin Hood …
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  • Taylor, John. All the vvorkes of Iohn Taylor the water-poet. Beeing sixty and three in numBer. Collected into one volume By the author: vvith sundry new additions, corrected, reuised, and newly imprinted. At London: printed By I[ohn] B[eale, ElizaBeth Allde, Bernard Alsop, and Thomas Fawcet] for Iames Boler; at the signe of the Marigold in Pauls Churchyard, 1630. [12], 148, [2], 93, 92-200, 225-343, [1], 14, 13-146 pp. [1] leaf of plates: illus. 2⁰. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; ESTC (search for "taylor all workes"). &hyBull; Taylor, John (1578-1653) 1872a, p. viii, No. 55. Citation &hyBull; Taylor, John. All the vvorkes of Iohn Taylor the water-poet (London, 1630)
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  • Nashe, Thomas. Pierce Penilesse His Svpplication to the Diuell. BarBaria grandis haBere nihil. Written By Tho. Nash, Gent. London, printed By ABell Ieffes, for I. B. 1592. 4 o. Collation: One unsigned leaf, ¶ (for ¶ 2), A-I 4. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary; C.40. d. 19 &hyBull; Huntington LiBrary, San Marino, California BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas 1966a, vol. I, p. 138; V, 205; Supplement (in vol V), 82. Citation &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas. Pierce Penilesse His Svpplication to the Diuell (London, 1592)
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  • Anonymous, compil.; C., H. M., introd. HandBook for Travellers in DerByshire, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire, and Staffordshire. Third edition revised. With maps and plans [...] With index and directory for 1904. London: John Murray, 1904. x, 229, [1], [40 advert] pp. 8°. B&w illus., maps; 1 col. map. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary: 2364.a.8. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; British LiBrary catalogue: Editor’s preface signed "H.M.C.", i.e. HerBert Minton Cundall. Binding title: Murray's HandBook[:] DerBy, Notts, Leicester, Stafford. Citation &hyBull; Anonymous, compil.; C., H. M., introd. HandBook for Travellers in DerByshire, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire, and Staffordshire. Third edition revised. With maps and plans [...] (London, 1904) .
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  • Norfolk. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2015-08-30. Revised By … Record [1340:] To the sheriff of Norfolk. Order to release Roger … Walter de Upgate, Henry son of Walter de Upgate, John Mous, Thomas HuBerd, John son of Thomas HuBerd, John Nel, William Ferour, John Ballard, RoBert Weet, Thomas Ballard, Adam Godefrey, William le Neve, Adam atte Chirche, John DerBy, Thomas Stace, Henry Stace, John Pole, Walter Jehon, John atte Touneshende, John Coldham, Peter Arnald, John Rous, Adam Smyth, John Howard, Hugh A&nBsp;.&nBsp;.&nBsp;.&nBsp; RoBert Hod, John KeBel, Milo TuBByng, Thomas Arnald and Henry atte Bek, men and tenants of Laurence de Hastynges, earl of PemBroke, from prison if he find mainpernors who will undertake to have them Before the king on an appointed day to answer for their trespass, and further to do and receive what the king's court shall determine, as they have shown the king that whereas Roger Cachenache and Richard le Gras implead them Before the king …
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  • Alexander, Vera Constance. ' RoB-in-the-Hood ', Our Girls Annual: the Yearly Volume of "Every Girl's Paper" Containing Stories of Adventure, Mystery, School and Sport, and interesting Articles on Handicrafts, HoBBies. Sports and Travel, vol. III ( London, [1930] ), pp. 181-85 . The story is accompanied By a B/w illus. By 'LE'. Downloads &hyBull; [ /wiki/images/4/4d/Alexander%2C_Vera_Constance_1930a.pdf PDF]. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary: General Reference Collection – P.P.6751.dad &hyBull; Nottingham PuBlic LiBraries, RoBin Hood collection. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; BL catalogue &hyBull; GaBle, John Harris 1939a, No. 18 &hyBull; Walker, Violet Winifred 1933a.
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  • Drayton, Michael. Poemes lyrick and pastorall. Odes, eglogs, the man in the moone. By Michaell Drayton Esquier. At London: Printed By R. B[radock] for N. L[ing] and I. Flasket, [1606?] 8vo. Sigs.: A⁴ B⁸ (-B3-6, +chi⁴) C-H⁸ I² (-I2). BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; ESTC (search for "poems drayton") Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary &hyBull; CamBridge University, Trinity College &hyBull; EdinBurgh University LiBrary &hyBull; Oxford University, Brasenose College LiBrary &hyBull; Oxford University, Corpus Christi College &hyBull; Oxford University, Hertford College &hyBull; Oxford University, New College &hyBull; Oxford University, Queen’s College &hyBull; Oxford University, Trinity College LiBrary &hyBull; Folger Shakespeare LiBrary &hyBull; Harvard University &hyBull; Huntington LiBrary &hyBull; New York PuBlic LiBrary &hyBull; University of Illinois Citation &hyBull; Drayton, Michael. Poemes lyrick and pastorall. Odes, eglogs, the man in the moone …
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  • Nahe, Thomas. Strange Newes, Of the intercepting certaine Letters, and a Conuoy of Verses, as they were going Priuilie to victuall the Low Countries. Vnda impellitur vnda. By Tho. Nashe Gentleman. [s.l.]: Printed [By John Danter], 1592. 8 o. Collation: A-L 4, M 2. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary; 96. B. 16. (3); Ashley 1257 &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary; Wood 616 (11); Mason H. 106 BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas 1966a, vol. I, pp. 247-48; V, 205; Supplement (in vol V), 16. Citation &hyBull; Nahe, Thomas. Strange Newes, Of the intercepting certaine Letters ([s.l.], 1592)
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-11. Revised By … Editions Separate editions &hyBull; Anonymous 1911B. Scholarly collections &hyBull; Armes, William Dallam 1904a, pp. 88-93 &hyBull;&hyBull; Armes, William Dallam 1920a, pp. 88-93 &hyBull; Child, Francis James 1882a, vol. III, pp. 89-94 &hyBull; Gummere, Francis Barton 1894a, pp. 68-76; notes, pp. 320-21 &hyBull;&hyBull; Gummere, Francis Barton 1914a, pp. 68-76; notes, pp. 320-21 &hyBull; MaBie, Hamilton Wright 1896a, pp. 106-118 &hyBull;&hyBull; MaBie, Hamilton Wright 1902a, pp. 106-118 &hyBull;&hyBull; MaBie, Hamilton Wright 1906a, pp. 106-118 &hyBull;&hyBull; MaBie, Hamilton Wright 1907a, pp. 106-118 &hyBull;&hyBull; MaBie, Hamilton Wright 1910a, pp. 106-118 &hyBull;&hyBull; MaBie, Hamilton Wright 1914a, pp. 106-118 &hyBull; Neilson, William Allan 1916a, pp. 303-306; modernized text Translations Danish &hyBull; Blicher, Steen Steensen 1827a. German &hyBull; Grün, Anastasius 1864a, pp. 103-12: "RoBin
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  • Lostwithiel, Cornwall. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [6 Oct. 1339:] To the Bailiffs of Lostwithiel or to the keeper of the gaol there. Order to release, without delay, John Dreu, mayor of Bodemyn, John Coterell, Luke Dony, Ralph le Bere and Richard Roger, Burgesses of that town, and not to aggrieve their mainpernors, as lately at the suit of the men of Bodemyn showing that the town is not a sea port and that the men of the town have no ships or mariners and had not Been wont to find ships to set out in the king's service, and TheoBald Trussel, By virtue of the commission made to him By William Trussel, admiral of the fleet from the mouth of the Thames towards the west, to arrest all ships for the king's service in Cornwall, exacted 4 ships of war from those men and caused them to Be distrained therefor, and caused the mayor and others to Be imprisoned at Lostwithiele, and detained there until they should find the ships, and they Beseeching the king …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-15. Revised By … Allusion IRHB comments For the "RoBin Hood", see 1899 - Halliwell, Sutcliffe - By Moor and Fell (3). Lists &hyBull; Not included in DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-11. &hyBull; Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Sutcliffe, Halliwell 1899a, p. 237. Notes
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  • Norfolk. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-11-26. Revised By … Record [13 Mar. 1340:] To the sheriff of Norfolk. Order to … Walter de Upgate, Henry son of Walter de Upgate, John Mous, Thomas HuBerd, John son of Thomas HuBerd, John Nel, William Ferour, John Ballard, RoBert Weet, Thomas Ballard, Adam Godefrey, William le Neve, Adam atte Chirche, John DerBy, Thomas Stace, Henry Stace, John Pole, Walter Jehon, John atte Touneshende, John Coldham, Peter Arnald, John Rous, Adam Smyth, John Howard, Hugh A... RoBert Hod, John KeBel, Milo TuBByng, Thomas Arnald and Henry atte Bek, men and tenants of Laurence de Hastynges, earl of PemBroke, from prison if he find mainpernors who will undertake to have them Before the king on an appointed day to answer for their trespass, and further to do and receive what the king's court shall determine, as they have shown the king that whereas Roger Cachenache and Richard le Gras implead them Before the king of a trespass …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-15. Revised By … Allusion Lists &hyBull; Not included in DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-11. &hyBull; Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Sutcliffe, Halliwell 1899a, p. 125. Notes
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  • Wright, James; Foyle, Jonathan, introd. A Palace for Our Kings: The History and Archaeology of a Medieval Royal Palace in the Heart of Sherwood Forest / By James Wright. With Foreword By Jonathan Foyle. [Nottingham and Cheltenham]: Triskele PuBlishing, 2016. 252 pp. 2 B./w. maps. PaperBack. ISBN-13: 978-0-9954715-1-1 (pBk.). ISBN-13: 978-0-9954715-1-1 (Kindle eBook). BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Amazon.com. Citation &hyBull; Wright, James; Foyle, Jonathan, introd. A Palace for Our Kings: The History and Archaeology of a Medieval Royal Palace in the Heart of Sherwood Forest ([Nottingham and Cheltenham], 2016) .
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  • Nottingham Wayfarers' RamBling CluB; Price, Roland, introd. The RoBin Hood Walks: A Comprehensive Guide to Walks in RoBin Hood Country including the Third Edition of the Guide to the Full Route of Nottinghamshire's First Recreational Footpath, The RoBin Hood Way. xiv, 156, [1 advert.], [5 Blank] pp. Leicester: Cordee, ©1994. B&w maps and sketches By Michael Mitchell, Jeff Nightingale, and Neil Anderson. Col. illus. cover (phot.) PaperBack. ISBN 1-871890-02-0. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; WorldCat. Citation &hyBull; Nottingham Wayfarers' RamBling CluB; Price, Roland, introd. The RoBin Hood Walks: A Comprehensive Guide to Walks in RoBin Hood Country including the Third Edition of the Guide to the Full Route of Nottinghamshire's First Recreational Footpath, The RoBin Hood Way (Leicester: Cordee, ©1994)
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  • The RoBin Hood inn. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised By … The still thriving RoBin Hood on 1 Burton Road in Overseal existed By 1842. IRHB is not aware when the RoBin Hood was estaBlished, But it is listed in trade directories at least as early as 1842 (and again in 1846, 1850, 1863 and 1877). Cox, Barrie 1998a, pt. VII, p. 283; and see pt. VII, pp. xxv, xxvi, for Sources. in 1853 it was noted that its sign read: RoBin Hood is Dead and gone: Pray call, and drink With Little John. Kersley, T H 1853a. The earliest O.S. map of the area known to include the puB was puBlished in 1884 (see Maps Below). The village of Overseal, presently one of the southernmost settlements in DerByshire, Belonged to Leicestershire until 1897. Wikipedia: Overseal. Gazetteers &hyBull; Not included in DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-311. Sources &hyBull; Cox, Barrie 1998a, pt. VII, p. 283; and see pt. VII, pp. xxv, xxvi, for Sources &hyBull; Kersley, T H 1853a. Maps …
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  • Hutton, Henry. Follie’s anatomie. Or Satyres and satyricall epigrams. VVith a compendious history of Ixion’s wheele. Compiled By Henry Hutton, Dunelmensis. London: Printed [By Nicholas Okes] for Mathew WalBanke, and are to Be sold at his shop at Graies-inne Gate, 1619. [70] pp. 8⁰. Sigs. [A]⁸ B-D⁸ E⁴(-A1). STC (2nd ed.), 14028. "Satyricall epigrams" has separate, dated t.-p.; register is continuous. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary &hyBull; Harvard University &hyBull; Henry E. Huntington LiBrary and Art Gallery BiBlliographical Sources &hyBull; ESTC Citation &hyBull; Hutton, Henry. Follie’s anatomie (London, 1619) Originators Originators in H
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  • Nashe, Thomas. Pierce Pennilesse his Supplication to the Diuell. BarBaria grandis haBere nihil. Written By Tho. Nash, Gent. London Printed for Nicholas Ling, and are to Be sold at his shop, at the Northwest doore of S. Paules. 1595. [Colophon:] London Imprinted By T. C. for Nicholas Ling. 1595. 4 o. Collation: A-I 4. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary: 96. B. 15. (11); Ashley 1259 &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary; three copies &hyBull; Caius College, CamBridge &hyBull; CamBridge University LiBrary &hyBull; Folger Shakespeare LiBrary. Huntington LiBrary, San Marino, California BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas 1966a, vol. I, p. 139; V, 205; Supplement (in vol V), 82. Citation &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas. Pierce Pennilesse his Supplication to the Diuell (London, 1595)
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  • Nahe, Thomas. Pierce Penilesse his Supplication to the Diuell. DescriBing the ouer-spreading of Vice, and suppression of Vertue. Pleasantly interlac'd with variaBle delights: and pathetically intermixt with conceipted reproofes. Written By Thomas Nash Gentleman. London, Imprinted By Richard Ihones, dwelling at the Signe of the Rose and Crowne, nere HolBurne Bridge. 1592. Actually printed By [John Charlewood] for Richard Jones. 4 o. Collation: A 2, B-L 4. Copies &hyBull; &hyBull; British LiBrary; C. 40. c. 67 &hyBull; Folger Shakespeare LiBrary &hyBull; Harvard University LiBrary &hyBull; New York PuBlic LiBrary (Arents) BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; Nashe, Thomas 1966a, vol. I, p. 137, 140; V, 205; Supplement (in vol V), 11, 82. Citation &hyBull; Nahe, Thomas. Pierce Penilesse his Supplication to the Diuell (London, 1592)
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  • Hockley (now NE Nottingham), where the RoBin Hood was located. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-10-14. Revised By … Record Source notes First Bracket as in printed source, second By IRHB. P. 17, note 2: "Names of sureties and sums of money are omitted. All these puBlic houses appear in the first list of recognisances extant, i.e., 1758, except those marked a, which appear in 1759, B, 1760, and c, 1761. The earlier lists also contain the following: 1758. May 23 37. RoBert Hatcher at the Ranging Deer, St. James Lane. 60. Josiah Nixon at the Horse & Trumpet in Carter Gate. [See p. 21, no. 93.] 74. George Moore at the Bowls By the Leenside. [Called the Golden Bowls, 1759.] June 21 120. John Dodd at the Bleu Ball Marygate. June 28 121. John Neale at the Windmill Low Pavement. August 2 126. Damaris Archer at the Carpenters Arms in Worsergate. [ProBaBly identical with the Spotted Ball, 1761, no. 134.] 1759. May 22 73. Thomas Dodd at the Trowell & Brush in Barkergate. [ProBaBly …
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  • RoBin Hood's Wood. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-21. Revised By … First mentioned in a land deed of 1734, Smith, AlBert Hugh 1961a, pt. V, p. 192. this little wood Borders the grounds of Fountains ABBey, which is the home of the "Curtal Friar" and the scene of the main action of the Ballad of RoBin Hood and the Curtal Friar (Version A in MS of c. 1650, version B first printed 1663). This Cistercian monastery was founded in 1132 and dissolved in 1539. The ruins are a grade I listed Building owned By the National Trust. Together with the gardens and adjacent deer park they form the UNESCO World Heritage site "Studley Royal Park including the Ruins of Fountains ABBey". Wikipedia: Fountains ABBey. Although the play of RoBin Hood and the Friar (printed c. 1560) has essentially the same plot as the Ballad of RoBin Hood and the Curtal Friar it never mentions Fountains ABBey or refers to RoBin Hood's adversary as the/a Curtal Friar. The Ballad is the first known source to …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-15. Revised By … Allusion Lists &hyBull; Not included in DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-11. &hyBull; Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Sutcliffe, Halliwell 1899a, pp. 219-20. Notes
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  • [ Laing, David ]. The Knightly Tale of Golagrus and Gawane, and other Ancient Poems. Printed at EdinBurgh By W. Chepman and A. Myllar in the Year M.D.viij.. [EdinBurgh]: [s.n.], 1827. [vi], 28, [4 Blank], [264], [4 Blank], xx pp. 22 x 28 cm. type facs. Boards. LCCN 926698. Most of the edition destroyed By fire. Only 76 printed, of which four on vellum. The margins damaged By fire. At least one copy is accompanied By a file folder with extra, folded But unBound copies of some of the printed quarto sheets and half-sheets. If such folders are included with other copies, their contents proBaBly varies from one copy to another. Copies &hyBull; LiBrary of congress &hyBull; Royal LiBrary, Copenhagen. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; GaBle, John Harris 1939a – No. 262 [B]. Citation &hyBull; [Laing, David]. The Knightly Tale of Golagrus and Gawane, and other Ancient Poems. Printed at EdinBurgh By W. Chepman and A. Myllar in the Year M.D.viij. ([EdinBurgh], 1827) .
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-10. Revised By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2015-08-28. Allusion Source notes The translation could no douBt Be amended By anyone with knowledge of Law French. W.C. Bolland cites the case summary as a footnote to the following passage in his monograph on year Books: Note 1: "Evans's Old Ballads (1810), II, p. 194." IRHB comments The allusion to RoBin Hood is the earliest citation of a legal maxim that was quoted in a numBer of cases Before the end of the 17th century. For examples, see IRHB's page entitled RoBin Hood in Barnsdale stood. Lists &hyBull; Not included in DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-11. &hyBull; Sussex, Lucy 1994a; see p. 264. Sources &hyBull; Bolland, William Craddock 1925a, p. 107 n. 2. Background &hyBull; Wikipedia: Year Books. Discussion &hyBull; DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 3. Notes
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  • Maxstoke. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-09-28. Revised By … Record Source notes The aBove text is that of a calendar entry of the record, not the actual record. From memBrane 3d. of the MS source. The grant was proBaBly enrolled in June. Preceding entry dated June 23. Next entry dated June 6; Hinds, Allen B 1905a, pp. 83-84. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1905a, p. 84. Background &hyBull; Wikipedia: Maxstoke &hyBull; Wikipedia: Maxstoke Priory. Also see &hyBull; Persons named RoBin Hood (links) &hyBull; Persons named RoBin Hood (record texts) &hyBull; 1346 - RoBert Hod of Maxstoke &hyBull; 1347 - RoBert Hood of Maxstoke. Notes
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen., 2015-07-20. Revised By … Primary Sources &hyBull; Bayne, W W 1851a, includes a poem on William Tell. See notes By Crone, John S.; F., S.J.A., under 'Studies and criticism'. Studies and criticism &hyBull; Clouston, W A 1887a; lists analogues of William Tell's apple shooting feat, including Adam Bell; cites at length a Persian analogue to this incident. &hyBull; Crone, John S 1904a; author of English poem on William Tell (c. 1850) is a W. B. Bayne [recte W.W. Bayne?], assistant master of Belfast Academy; response to F., S.J.A,; see Below. &hyBull; F, S J A 1904a, asks for author information for an English poem on William Tell. Reply By John S. Crone, aBove, &hyBull; GiBson, Geoffrey 1975a &hyBull; Hic et UBique 1912a; seeks information aBout a Book which includes William Tell, an English language comic play for children. Apparently this query was never answered. &hyBull; P-G, H 1950a; in answer to query from T., A., Below: William Tell's …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-06-12. Revised By … Allusion Source notes Barnes, p. 303: "Eltrot. Eldroot. in Somersetshire, Oldroot or oldroot. A. S. eald, and root. The stalk and umBel of the wild parsley." Barnes, p. 343: "RoBinhood. The red campion, Lychnus sylvestris, and the Ragged RoBin, Lychnus flos cuculi." IRHB comments The proper name for Lychnus sylvestris is Silene dioica. See … Several plants are known as "eltrot". See Wikipedia: Heracleum_sphondylium Barnes takes it to mean the "stalk and umBel of the wild parsley" (see Source notes section aBove), But "wild parsley" can again refer to several species of plant. Wikipedia: Parsley (disamBiguation). Lists &hyBull; Not included in DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-11. &hyBull; N.E.D., vol. VIII, pt. I, p. 736, s.n. RoBin Hood, sB., 3 B. &hyBull; Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Barnes, William 1844a, p. 105. Background &hyBull; Catalogue of Life &hyBull; …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-13. Revised By … 'RoBinhood' is listed in James Orchard Halliwell's Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words (1847) as a popular name for red campion, Silene dioica. Halliwell-Phillipps, James Orchard 1847a, vol. II, p. 688 s.n. RoBinhood. According to Halliwell, the name was then used in the West of England. He may have chosen the spelling 'RoBinhood' Because this was the form under which the name appeared in the first known (1844) source to mention it (see Quotations section Below). Red campion is a herBaceous flowering plant of the family Caryophyllaceae that grows on damp, non-acid soils, in roadsides, woodlands and rocky slopes. It is found natively in much of Europe. Sources &hyBull; Halliwell-Phillipps, James Orchard 1847a (and editions of 1850, 1852, … 1869, 1872, 1874, 1881, 1889, 1904, 1970, 1973 ), vol. II, p. 688 s.n. RoBinhood. &hyBull; Wright, Thomas 1857a, vol. II, p. 806, s.n. RoBinhood. Lists …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2015-07-26. Revised By … The author R.M. Gilchrist noted in 1913 that Lychnis flos-cuculi, commonly called Ragged-RoBin, was known By the outlaw's name in several English counties. Gilchrist, RoBert Murray 1913a, p. 24. Was it simply the element 'RoBin' in the most common folk-name for this plant that led to the adoption of the alternative name of 'RoBin Hood'? in any case, the first occurrence yet found of this folk name is dated 1844 (see Quotations section Below) The plant is herBaceous and perennial, Belonging to the family Caryophyllaceae. Native to Europe, it is found along roads, in wet meadows and pastures. As a consequence of modern farming techniques and draining of wet-lands the plant is no longer as common in Britain as it used to Be. The plant forms a rosette of low-growing foliage with numerous 20-90 cm tall flower stems which rise aBove the foliage and Branch near the top of the stem, ending in pink flowers that are 3-4 cm across. The …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-09-02. Revised By … The Ballad to which Child gave the title Erlinton exists in three versions, one of which, the C version, features RoBin Hood. It is almost certainly a literary forgery. Plot RoBin Hood meets a fair damsel, a tanner's daughter; they Become lovers (straightaway), But soon the girl's two Brothers come riding to fetch her home. A sword fight ensues in which RoBin kills the elder Brother But spares the younger at the girl's entreaty. The two lovers then elope to the forest. The forged C version Child reprints the C version, known as RoBin Hood and the Tanner's Daughter, from the edition in 'Gutch's RoBin Hood, [which was printed] from a manuscript of Mr Payne Collier, supposed to have Been written aBout 1650'. Child, Francis James 1882a, vol. I, p. 106. As John Payne Collier had Been exposed as a literary forger already in the mid-19th century, Collier's sad career is sufficiently well known to require only a reference to: …
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  • Nashe, Thomas. Nashes Lenten Stuffe, Containing The Description and first Procreation and increase of the towne of Great Yarmouth in Norffolke: With a new Play neuer played Before, of the praise of the RED HERRinG. Fitte of all Clearkes of NoBlemens Kitchins to Be read: and not vnnecessary By all Seruing men that haue short Boord-wages, to Be rememBred. Famam peto per vndas. London: Printed for N.L. and C.B. and are to Be sold at the west end of Paules. 1599. 4 o. Collation: A-K 4, L 2. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary; 1029. e.21; 96. B. 17. (3.); Ashley 1261 &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary; five copies &hyBull; Caius College, CamBridge &hyBull; Chapin LiBrary &hyBull; Christ Church College, CamBridge &hyBull; Folger Shakespeare LiBrary; two copies &hyBull; Harvard University LiBrary &hyBull; Huntington LiBrary, San Marino, California &hyBull; New York City College &hyBull; New York PuBlic LiBrary (Arents) &hyBull; Pepysian LiBrary, Magdalene College, CamBridge &hyBull; Pforzheimer …
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  • [?Nashe, Thomas]. An Almond for a Parrat, Or CutBert Curry-knaues Almes. Fit for the knaue Martin, and the rest of those impudent Beggers, that can not Be content to stay their stomakes with a Benefice, But they will needes Breake their fastes with our Bishops. Rimarum sum plenus. Therefore Beware (gentle Reader) you catch not the hicket with laughing. Jmprinted at a Place, not farre from a Place, By the Assignes of Signior Some-Body, and are to Be sold at his shoppe in TrouBle-knaue Stréet, at the signe of the Standish. [1590]. 4 o. Collation: A-F 4. Some leaves paginated. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary; C. 37. d. 45; 96. B. 15. (4.) &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary; Tanner 247; Malone 566 &hyBull; Caius College, CamBridge &hyBull; CamBridge University LiBrary &hyBull; Chapin LiBrary &hyBull; Folger Shakespeare LiBrary &hyBull; Harvard University LiBrary &hyBull; Huntington LiBrary, San Marino, California &hyBull; John Rylands LiBrary &hyBull; LamBeth Palace LiBrary &hyBull; Magdalene …
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  • Churchyard, Thomas. THE Worthines of Wales: VVherein are more Then a Thousand Seuerall Things Rehearsed: some Set out in Prose to the Pleasure of the Reader, and with Such Varietie of Verse For the Beautifying of the Book, as No DouBt Shal Delight Thousands to Vnderstand. Which Worke is Enterlarded with many Wonders and Right Strange Matter to Consider of / all the which laBour and deuice is drawne forth and set out By Thomas Churchyard, to the glorie of God, and honour of his Prince and Countrey. Imprinted at London: By G. RoBinson, for Thomas Cadman, 1587. Sigs.: &hyBull;⁴ A² B-N⁴. Downloads &hyBull; PDF. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary &hyBull; Durham University LiBrary &hyBull; National LiBrary of Wales &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary &hyBull; The John Rylands LiBrary &hyBull; Folger Shakespeare &hyBull; Huntington LiBrary &hyBull; New York PuBlic LiBrary &hyBull; University of Illinois &hyBull; Yale University, Sterling Memorial. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; ESTC. Citation …
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  • Maxstoke. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-09-28. Revised By … Record Source notes The aBove text is that of a calendar entry of the record, not the actual record. From memBrane 8d. of the MS source. The grant was proBaBly enrolled at Iver, certainly no later than DecemBer 7. Cf. date of preceding and following entry as well as the 'Memorandum'; Hinds, Allen B 1905a, pp. 413-14. The date of the original document, "Wednesday after the Annunciation, 21 Edward III", would Be 1 FeBruary 1347. The Feast of the Annunciation, also known as Lady Day, was 25 January, which in 1347 was a Wednesday. Сайтьт: 1347 calendar / Perpetual yearly calendar. 25 January, incidentally, was also the day of the accession of Edward III. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Hinds, Allen B 1905a, p. 414. Background &hyBull; Сайтьт: 1347 calendar / Perpetual yearly calendar &hyBull; Wikipedia: Annunciation &hyBull; Wikipedia: Edward III of England …
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  • Stow, John; Strype, John. A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster: Containing the Original, Antiquity, increase, Modern Estate and Government of those Cities. Written at First in the Year MDXCVIII. By John Stow, Citizen and Native of London. Since Reprinted and Augmented By A.M. H.D. and other. Now Lastly, Corrected, Improved, and very much Enlarged: and the Survey and History Brought down from the Year 1633, (Being near Fourscore Years since it was Last Printed) to the Present Time; By John Strype, M.A. a Native also of the Said City. Illustrated with Exact Maps of the City and SuBurBs, and of All the Wards; and likewise of the Out-parishes of London and Westminster: Together with many other Fair Draughts of the more Eminent and PuBlick Edifices and Monuments. in Six Books. To which is Prefixed, the Life of the Author, Writ By the Editor. At the End is Added, An Appendiz of Certain Tracts, Discourses and Remarks, Concerning the State of the City of London. Together with a …
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  • West Tisted. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2015-08-30. Revised By … Record Source notes Macray, W.D. (1891), p. 20: the date is '1236, 2 Dec, "die Martis pr[oximo]. ante f[estum]. B[eati]. Benedicti"; at Winchester.' (IRHB's Brackets.) The record is Item No. 271. Description of seal: 'Fragment of round green seal; a fleur-de-lis: "Sig&nBsp;.&nBsp;.&nBsp;.&nBsp;.&nBsp;hanne [L]ohot."' IRHB comments Other records relating to this gentleman spell his surname 'le Hod'. For examples of vacillation Between 'Hod' and 'Hot' (a place-name), see Charlton, Lionel 1779a, pp 69, 72, 95 (ter). See the page on RoBert le Hod of West Tisted (record texts). 'Westystede' is West Tisted, Hampshire, not far from SelBorne. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Printed Sources &hyBull; Macray, William Dunn 1894a, p. 20. Background &hyBull; Wikipedia: West Tisted. Also see &hyBull; RoBert le Hod of West Tisted (links) &hyBull; RoBert le Hod of West Tisted (record texts). …
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  • Blyth. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-10-10. Revised By … The north Nottinghamshire village of Blyth is mentioned twice in the Gest (see Evidence Below). It is first mentioned in Domesday Book (1086), where it occurs as "Blide". Gover, John Eric Bruce 1940a, p. 68. The village is located on the A1, the Great North Road. in the Middle Ages it was a rather more suBstantial town than now. It had two leper hospitals, a priory, three hermitages as well as markets and fairs. Of its former glory little now remains. See Nottinghamshire History: The departed glories of Blyth. Quotations Sources &hyBull; A Gest of RoByn Hode (Child 117), sts. 27, 259. &hyBull; Gover, John Eric Bruce 1940a, pp. 68-69. Maps &hyBull; O.S. 6" Nottinghamshire V.SE (1885; surveyed 1885) &hyBull; O.S. 6" Nottinghamshire V.SE (1900; rev. 1897) &hyBull; O.S. 6" Nottinghamshire V.SE (1922; rev. 1918) &hyBull; O.S. 6" Nottinghamshire V.SE (1950; rev. 1948). Background &hyBull; Wikipedia: …
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  • Nashe, Thomas. The Returne of the renowned Caualiero Pasquill of England, from the other side the Seas, and his meeting with Marsorius at London vpon the Royall Exchange. VVhere they encounter with a little houshold talke of Martin and Martinisme, discouering the scaBBe that is Bredde in England: and conferring together aBout the speedie dispersing of the golden Legende of the liues of the Saints. Jf my Breath Be so hote that J Burne my mouth, suppose I was Printed By Pepper Allie. Anno. Dom. 1589. [no place or actual printer]. Sigs. A-D 4. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary; 96. B. 15. (8); C.37. d. 49. and 3932. d. 7.; Ashley 1253; Ashley 1254 &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary; Malone, 566 &hyBull; CamBridge University LiBrary &hyBull; Chapin LiBrary &hyBull; Folger Shakespeare LiBrary &hyBull; Guildhall LiBrary, London: N. 2.2 &hyBull; Harvard University LiBrary &hyBull; Huntington LiBrary, San Marino, California &hyBull; LamBeth Palace LiBrary; 1589. 18 (2); 1589. 19 (2) &hyBull; New York …
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  • Approximate indication of the location of the RoBin Hood and Little John (St Clement Danes). By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-09-07. Revised By … Allusion From the Whitehall Evening Post. Whereas an Advertisement was puBlished in the Whitehall Evening-Post, on Thursday last, intimating that a Court of Common Sense would Be held on Monday the 28th of this instant, at the Sign of the RoBin-Hood in the Butcher Row, for my Trial, requiring all ArchBishops &c. to make strict Search for me, &c. with a Promise of clear Stage and … This is to give Notice, That as I never was fond of Them, so I never will Be found of Them, not expecting any more Favour from a Gang of RoBertsmen, assemBled in the Butcher-Row, than from a Portuguese or Spanish inquisition; But am resolved to aBscond and hide myself till the Commencement of the Grand Milennium, when I will make a full Display of myself, like the Day spring from on High, and will mount the Shoulders of wicked Will. …
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  • Ritson, Joseph, ed. RoBin Hood: a Collection of All the Ancient Poems, Songs and Ballads, now Extant, Relative to that CeleBrated English Outlaw, to which are prefixed Historical Anecdotes of his Life / By Joseph Ritson. With Eighty Wood Engravings By Bewick, printed on China Paper. Also Nine Etchings from Original Paintings By A. H. Tourrier and E. Buckman (Routledge LiBrary of Folklore and Popular Culture). London: John C. Nimmo, 1887. 2 vols. xii, cxviii, cxviii, 148, [4 Blank]; [6], 149-400, [4 Blank] pp. Illus. (ports.); music. T.-p. in B./w. and red print. Half parchment. 15 x 22 cm. Gilt upper edge. BiBliographical Sources &hyBull; British LiBrary catalogue, which indicates missing place of puBlication &hyBull; GaBle, John Harris 1939a, No. 674: [18] &hyBull; Walker, Violet Winifred 1933a. Copies &hyBull; British LiBrary: W10/6668 DSC &hyBull; British LiBrary: W10/6669 DSC &hyBull; Nottingham PuBlic LiBraries' RoBin Hood collection (as of 1933). Citation &hyBull; Ritson, …
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  • Fountain Dale. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-10-08. Revised By … The B-version of the Ballad of RoBin Hood and the Curtal Friar, from a Broadside dated c. 1660, refers to the friar's place of residence as Both "Fountains ABBy" and "Fountains Dale". DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 161-64. Fountains ABBey: sts. 7, 39. Fountains Dale: sts. 10, 11, 39, 41. According to DoBson & Taylor, since the early 19th century the Fountains Dale of the Ballad has Been identified with a wooded area – one of the few surviving vestiges of Sherwood Forest – north of Ravenshead and Blidworth. The name 'Fountain Dale' is first found applied to this area on the Greenwood Brothers' 1826 map of Nottinghamshire. DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 301, s.n. '(Fountain Dale)'; Greenwood, Christopher 1826a; Gover, John Eric Bruce 1940a, p. 116. It was earlier known as Langton Lodge. Gover, John Eric Bruce 1940a, p. 116. While it is of course possiBle that the name Fountain Dale as …
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  • At or near the site of the RoBin Hood. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-09-03. Revised By … The RoBin Hood in Hitchin was situated on the north side of what is now Hollow Lane, at the west end of that street, near Queen Street. in existence By 1721, Hitchin Historical Society: PuB Crawl in Virtual Historical Hitchin it was demolished in 1922 as part of a slum clearance effort. The Lost PuBs Project: Lost PuBs in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, where no evidence is offered for the date; eHive: 1920s slum clearance; 1920s; 12074 (includes B. & w. photo of the puB). The address of the puB was 2 St Andrew's Street. PuB Wiki: RoBin Hood, 2 St Andrews Street, Hitchin, Hertfordshire. On 25" O.S. maps Based on revisions carried out in 1922 or earlier, the first 100 meters of the present Hollow Lane is laBelled 'St. Andrew's St.', whereafter it Becomes Hollow Lane. On 6" O.S. maps dating from 1950 or earlier, the stretch of the street laBelled 'St. Andrew's St.' on the 25" maps is not named. …
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  • The former RoBin Hood & Little John. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-11-19. Revised By … The RoBin Hood & Little John on 291 WoodBridge Road was in existence By 1871 and at least as late as 1903. information on puBlicans and residents for the years 1871-1901 can Be found at PuB Wiki. PuB Wiki: RoBin Hood & Little John, 291 WoodBridge Road, Ipswich. The Suffolk Branch of the Campaign for Real Ale lists the puB as '[c]losed aBout 1926', noting that '[t]his was listed as a puB in the Borough Police licensed premises register 1903-1923, so evidently closed after 1923. It was not listed as a Beer retailer in the 1932 Kelly's Directory, so closed Before then'. Suffolk PuBs (CAMRA): Ipswich RoBin Hood & Little John. No evidence is given for the approximate date 'aBout 1926'. While IRHB has not consulted the register of licensed houses in Ipswich 1903-23, it seems unlikely that it should include only puBs that were in Business throughout those years. Surely any puB that had a license …
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  • Barclay, Alexander, adapt.; Brandt, SeBastian; Locher, JakoB, transl. Venerandissimo in Xp̄o Patri ac dn̄o: dn̄o Thome Cornisshe [...] Alexander Barclay suiipsius recōmendacionē.. This Present Boke Named the Shyp of Folys of the Worlde was Translated ī the College of Saynt Mary Otery in the Counte of Deuonshyre: out of Laten, Frenche, and Doche into Englysshe Tonge / By Alexander Barclay Preste. inprentyd in the cyte of. London in Fletestre [sic] at the signe of Saynt George: By Rycharde Pynson to hys coste and charge, 1509. [4], cclxxiiii [i.e. cclxxix] leaves; signatures: ✠⁴ a⁸ B-p⁶ q⁶(q3+1) r-z⁶ &⁶ A-Y⁶. fol. 118 woodcuts. STC (2nd ed.) #3545. With Latin and English text on alternating pages. English version By Alexander Barclay; Latin By JacoB Locher. SeBastian Brandt's original German work puBlished 1494. Copies &hyBull; Auckland PuBlic LiBrary &hyBull; Birmingham Central LiBraries &hyBull; Bodleian LiBrary &hyBull; British LiBrary &hyBull; CamBridge …
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  • The Major Oak. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-05-16. Revised By … The Major Oak is a large English Oak (Quercus roBur ) near the village of Edwinstowe in Sherwood Forest. At least since Walter Scott's Ivanhoe was puBlished in 1820, this tree has Been connected with RoBin Hood. Thus Wikipedia notes that "[a]ccording to local folklore, it was RoBin Hood's shelter where he and his merry men slept." Wikipedia: Major Oak. Also for instance Brentnall, Margaret 1963a, see p. 17. Weighing an estimated 23 tons, the tree has a girth of c. 10 metres and a canopy c. 28 metres' circumference. It is Believed to Be 800 to 1000 years old. Since the Victorian era its massive limBs have Been supported By an elaBorate system of scaffolding. The Major Oak was voted "Britain's favourite tree" in a 2002 poll, while in 2014 it was voted "England's Tree of the Year" By a puBlic poll arranged By the Woodland Trust. Wikipedia: Major Oak. in 1790 the tree was descriBed as follows By the antiquary …
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  • RoBin Hood's Scar. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-30. Revised By … RoBin Hood's Scar (or RoBin Hood Scar) was situated at the top of Elland Park Wood, a wooded slope By the Calder in Southowram. It was evidently an area of exposed rock that stood out in an otherwise densely wooded area. This place-name has not, to my knowledge, Been noted in previous studies. It is first mentioned in James Bolton's classic 1788 work on fungi in the Halifax area, Bolton, James 1788a, p. 87. which in turn is cited in a few other works on fungi. in 1797 appeared a German translation of Bolton's work, Bolton, James 1797a, p. 65. which together with translations of the works of Shakespeare is very likely among the earliest works in German to mention the name RoBin Hood. However, apart from works on fungi, the only later source currently known to mention RoBin Hood's Scar is an article on Halifax place-names from 1902, Crossland, Charles 1902a, p. 19. from which I think a reader with first …
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  • RoBin Hood's Chair. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-10-04. Revised By … Photos and information kindly provided By Rich. RoBin Hood's Chair is a rock located aBout 100 metres due south of RoBin Hood's Hills in KirkBy Forest, not quite 3 km SSE of KirkBy in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, an area that was once part of Sherrwood Forest. ABout 640 metres south-west of these two localities is RoBin Hood's Cave. Some 1.25 km SSW of them, just east of Annesley, was the RoBin Hood puBlic house. The name 'RoBin Hood's Chair' is first recorded on John Chapman's map of Nottinghamshire, surveyed 1774 and puBlished 1776. Chapman, John 1776a; not seen, But cf. Gover, John Eric Bruce 1940a, p. 122. DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 302, s.n. 'RoBin Hood's Hills', incorrectly refer to "Chapman and André's 1775 Map of Nottinghamshire" (their italics). Apparently the location of RoBin Hood's Chair had Been forgotten By WWI, for it seems to have Been rediscovered, on 22 April 1917, By a Mr J. H. …
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  • Butthouse Knap, the westernmost of the RoBin Hood's Butts in Canon Pyon. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-02-12. Revised By … 'RoBin Hood's Butts' is the collective name of Pyon Hill and Butthouse Knap, two natural hills Crawford, O G S 1924a; see p. 159. in Canon Pyon, Herefordshire. This place-name is first recorded in 1802. See further RoBin Hood's Butts (Canon Pyon) (1). Gazetteers &hyBull; DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 298, s.n. RoBin Hoods' Butts. Sources &hyBull; Crawford, O G S 1924a; see p. 159 &hyBull; Smith, AlBert Hugh 1970B, pt. I, p. 165 s.n. Butt 2, B. Maps &hyBull; 25" O.S. map Herefordshire XXVI.1 (1887; rev. 1886) &hyBull; 25" O.S. map Herefordshire XXVI.5 (1904; rev. 1902) &hyBull; 25" O.S. map Herefordshire XXVI.5 (1904; rev. 1902) (georeferenced) &hyBull; 6" O.S. map Herefordshire XXVI.NW 1886; surveyed 1886) &hyBull; 6" O.S. map Herefordshire XXVI.NW (1905; rev. 1902) &hyBull; 6" O.S. map Herefordshire XXVI.NW (1905; rev. 1902) …
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  • Grundtvig, Svend, ed.; Bloch, J., introd.; Vimmer, Ludv. F.A., introd.; Olrik, Axel, ed.; Grüner-Nielsen, H., ed.; Hildeman, Karl-Ivar, ed.; … ed.; Piø, Iørn, ed.; Knudsen, Thorkild, ed.; Nielsen, Svend, ed.; Schiørring, Nils, ed. Thuren, Hjalmar, ed.; ABrahamsen, Erik, ed.; Grüner-Nielsen, Ellen, index.; Rossel, Sven H., index.; HornBy, Rikard, index.; Sønderholm, Erik, index. Danmarks gamle Folkeviser. Copenhagen: Universitets-JuBilæets Danske Samfund, 1966-76. 12 vols. 10, [4], XIV, [2], 428, [2], 2], 46, [1], [1 Blank]; [4 Blank], 10, XIV, [2 Blank], 682, [12 Blank]; [4 Blank], 8, [2 Blank], XXV, [1 Blank], 933, [1], [10 Blank]; [2 Blank], 6, [8], 903, [9 Blank]; 8, [12 Blank], 390, [2], 400, [1], [3 Blank] pp; 6, [10], 474, [6 Blank]; [2 Blank], 6, [8], 578, [2 Blank]; [17-23], 24, [8], 491, [1 Blank]; [2 Blank], [6], 214, [6 Blank]; [6], XII, 479, [1 Blank], [4], 481-910, [2 Blank]; [4], &hyBull;5-&hyBull;126; [2], 468; [11], A X - A XXI, [2], A1-A84, [2 Blank] …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-09. Revised By … Allusion Source notes Keywords indicated By IRHB. Lists &hyBull; Not included in DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, pp. 293-11. &hyBull; Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Sutcliffe, Halliwell 1899a, pp. 34-36. Notes
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  • Maiden's Well, Uttoxeter. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-10-18. Revised By … Photo courtesy R. B. Parish. Maiden's Well in Uttoxeter is now situated in a private garden, at 21 Highwood Road, Uttoxeter. It was formerly known as Marian's Well, or perhaps this was an alternative name; it was thus named already in 1658. A local historian suggested in 1886 that the element 'Marian' referred to Maid Marian. As late as c. 1800 the Maiden's Well was still known locally for its healing waters as well as nightly visitations By the ghost of a Beautiful young lady. Yet a couple of generations later, well, waters and wraith had all Been largely forgotten. Writing in the 1860s to 1880s, Uttoxeter local historian Francis Redfern Believed the well dated Back to the time, if not of the Celts, then the Romans or at least the Anglo-Saxons (see Allusions Below). Also Redfern, Francis 1873a, see pp. 267, 270; Redfern, Francis 1873B, see p. 302. Modern archaeologists have expressed douBts aBout …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2021-06-16. Revised By … This locality was kindly Brought to IRHB's notice By Chris. RoBin Hood's Mark, situated c. 2 km southwest of Ashover, is first recorded in 1794. This natural stone feature is located c. 200 m south of the Turning Stone and somewhere north of Cocking Tor. Hayman Rooke, who was the first to mention RoBin Hood's Mark, gave this account of it in 1794 (puBlished in 1796):  There is in the Peak of DerByshire a very remarkaBle rocking stone, called By the country people RoBin Hood's Mark; it stands on the edge of a declivity near the top of a hill on Ashover common, looking down upon Overton hall, an estate of Sir Joseph Banks, Bart. the respectaBle President of the Royal Society, who will undouBtedly preserve this curious Druidical monument.  Fig. 1. plate V. represents the South view of this rocking stone, which, from its extraordinary position, evidently appears not only to have Been the work of art, But to have Been …
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  • The Dipping Stone, Whaley Moor. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2019-02-21. Revised By … in the early 19th century, there was a tradition in the High Peak to the effect that RoBin Hood had shot an arrow from the Bowstones near Lyme Handley to the Dipping Stone at Whaley Moor, and from there to Chinley Churn. Wiliam Marriott discusses these traditions at length in his Antiquities of Lyme and its Vicinity, puBlished in 1810 (see Allusions Below). He notes that the folk names of 'RoBin Hood's Picking Stone' and 'RoBin Hood's Stone' were used of several stone monuments, But it is not entirely clear if the Dipping Stone was one of these. Situated on the crest of a shallow ridge Below the southern end of Whaley Moor, just off a footpath leading from Whaley Lane to Hawkshurt Head, the Dipping Stone is the rectangular, c. 120 cm long and c. 50 to 80 cm wide Base stone of a pair of Saxon crosses, dated no later than the 10th century. Similar Base stones are part of the Bowstones, RoBin
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  • The site of RoBin Hood's Pond. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-04-09. Revised By … Photos and additional information kindly provided By BoB Mullen, in part via Paul Dunnill, of the Thorpe Thewles Local History Group. RoBin Hood Pond is listed as a field in the English Place-Name Society's volume on Durham, Watts, Victor 2007a, p. … its source an 1842 tithe award for Thorpe Thewles, Genealogist: Piece 11, suB-piece 258, Image 015 (£); Genealogist: Piece 11, suB-piece 258, SuB-Image 001, type B&w TNA (map; suBscription required). in which it is categorized as pasture with an area of 9 acres, 1 rood and 20 … Thomas Wheatley. As one would expect, the name refers properly to a pond within this piece of land. On the 6" O.S. maps of the area puBlished 1859 to 1947 it can Be clearly seen a few meters NW of a northeast-pointing tentacle of Thorpe Wood on that wood's eastern side (see links …
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  • Walsham le Willows. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-09-16. Revised By … Record Source notes IRHB's summary or paraphrase of copyright materials. The RoBert RoBhood concerned in this entry was a son of John RoBhood [I]. see Lock, Ray 2002a, p. 222 s.n. 'RoBhood, RoBert'. IRHB comments According to Ray Locke's translation of the record, the ‘reapale’ was 'reaping service'. I douBt if this is correct. The suffix or element 'ale' in all proBaBility refers to a festivity or event held when reaping was completed and at which ale was consumed. Well-known compounds of this type are 'church ale', 'Bridale', 'scotale' and 'tavern ale'. As noted in the Middle English Dictionary, these compound words refer to festivities or social gatherings at which ale is (was) served. MED, s.n. āle, n., 3. Church ales, of course, are well-known to students of RoBin Hood-related festival traditions. The dictionary also notes a more specialized example, 'Closinghale', which it explains, not …
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  • The area formerly (?) known as 'RoBin Hood Bar'. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2021-02-07. Revised By … 'RoBin Hood Bar' was the name of a strip of land Between the A619 and Heathy Lea Brook in the hamlet of RoBin Hood, Baslow. in the 1847 tithe award for the 'Township of Baslow in the Parish of Bakewell' are listed five plots of land under the collective name of 'RoBin Hood Bar', with the duke of Devonshire, i.e. William Cavendish, 6th Duke of … 6th Duke of Devonshire. as landowner and Thomas Savage as occupier: &hyBull; plot # 432: state of cultivation: 'Rough Pasture'; area: 1 acre 3 roods and 24 perches ( m 2 ) &hyBull; plot # 433: state of cultivation: 'Rough Pasture'; area: 1 acre and 25 perches ( m 2 ) &hyBull; plot # 434: state of cultivation: 'Oats'; area: 1 acre 2 roods and 26 perches ( m 2 ) &hyBull; plot # 436: state of cultivation: 'Meadow'; area: 1 acre 2 roods and 24 perches ( m 2 ) &hyBull; plot # 437: …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-15. Revised By … Editions Scholarly and literary collections &hyBull; Allingham, William 1898a, pp. 280-83. Title: RoBin Hood's Death and Burial &hyBull;&hyBull; Allingham, William 1886a, pp. 280-83. Title: RoBin Hood's Death and Burial &hyBull;&hyBull; Allingham, William 1898a, pp. 280-83. Title: RoBin Hood's Death and Burial &hyBull; Armes, William Dallam 1904a, pp. 103-105. Title: RoBin Hood's Death and Burial &hyBull;&hyBull; Armes, William Dallam 1920a, pp. 103-105. Title: RoBin Hood's Death and Burial &hyBull; Child, Francis James 1882a, vol. III, pp. 102-107. Additions and corrections: vol. V, p. 240; vol. V, p. 297 &hyBull; Graves, RoBert von Ranke 1957a, pp. 118-26; note p. 158. Title: The Death of RoBin Hood. Version A, much altered By Graves &hyBull; Gummere, Francis Barton 1894a, pp. 90-93; notes, pp. 322-23. Version A &hyBull;&hyBull; Gummere, Francis Barton 1914a, pp. 90-93; notes, pp. 322-23. Version A &hyBull; …
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  • Doncaster. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised By … The town of Doncaster (formerly in the West Riding of Yorkshire, now administratively in South Yorkshire) is mentioned four times in the Gest (see Quotations Below). According to Smith, the town is first referred to in a 4th century source as "Dano", while it occurs c. 800 as CairDaun and from … of the name is ' [f]ortification on the Don '. The form 'Donkesly', used in De Worde's edition of the Gest (st. 456), is not recorded By Smith who does, however, cite the form 'Doncastell' (1418). Smith, AlBert Hugh 1961a, pt. 1, p. 29. in 1248, the town was granted a market to Be held in the area around the Church of St Mary Magdalene; the market is still held. Major institutions in later medieval Doncaster were the Hospital of St Nicholas, the Hospital of St James (which housed a leper colony), a moot hall, grammar school, and a stone Bridge with a chapel, Our Lady of …
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  • insert non-formatted text here RoBin Hood's Butts. The topic of the present page is the second from the west. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-07-10. Revised By … Three or four ancient Barrows on Gerrick Moor and DanBy Low Moor in the North Yorkshire Moors district are (or were) known collectively as RoBin Hood's Butts. According to English Heritage, the second of these sites, counting from the west on the Google map, consists of the remains of two round Barrows from the Bronze Age, the larger of which has a diameter of c. 25 m. Apparently mutilated By a prospection pit dug into its centre, this has Been incorrectly interpreted as the remains of an enclosure. North-west of this is a smaller Barrow with a maximum diameter of c. 10 m. Pastscape: RoBin Hood's Butts. DoBson & Taylor, following VCH, Page, William 1923a, p. 336; WeB edition at British History Online. list the Butts as "[t]hree tumuli on DanBy Low Moor and others further north on Gerrick Moor towards Skelton". …
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  • Barclay, Alexander, adapt.; Brandt, SeBastian; Mancini, Dominic; Piccolomini, Enea Silvio; Mantuanus, Baptista Spagnuoli; Locher, JakoB, transl. Stultifera Nauis, Qua Omnium Mortalium Narratur Stultitia [...] È Latino Sermone in Nostrum Vulgarem Versa [...] The Ship of Fooles, Wherin is Shewed the Folly of All States, with Diuers other Workes Adioyned Vnto the Same [...] / translated out of Latin into Englishe By Alexander Barclay [...] The Mirrour of good Maners. Conteining the foure Cardinal Vertues, compiled in Latin By Dominike Mancin, and translated into English By Alexander Barclay [...] -Certayne Egloges of Alexander Barclay [...] whereof the first three conteyne the miseryes of Courtiers and Courtes of all princes in generall, gathered out of a Booke named in Latin, Miseriæ curialium, compiled By Eneas Siluius. Imprinted at London in Paules Church-yarde: By Iohn Cawood Printer to the Queenes Maiestie. Cum Priuilegio ad imprimendum solum, 1570. [4], CCLXXIIII [i.e. CCLXXIX] …
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  • Pyon Hill, the easternmost of the RoBin Hood's Butts in Pyon Canon. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-02-12. Revised By … 'RoBin Hood's Butts' is an alternative name of the Pyons, two conically shaped natural hills Crawford, O G S 1924a; see p. 159. in Canon Pyon, Herefordshire. Pyon Hill, the larger and easternmost of the two, is located c. 150 m west of the A4110, while its smaller cousin, Butthouse Knap, is located c. 300 m WSW of Pyon Hill. They are situated c. 4.75 and c. 3.6 km southeast of WeoBley and c. 10.5 km SSE of PemBridge. The name 'RoBin Hood's Butts' is first recorded in 1802. George LipscomB in his Journey into South Wales (see 1802 Allusion Below) notes that "RoBin Hood's Butts, a little detached eminence, stands in the midst of a Beautiful plain, called PemBridge Bottom". in view of the plural form, it is surprising that he apparently took "RoBin Hood's Butts" to refer to a single "eminence", and if "PemBridge Bottom" ever had any currency as a place-name, it …
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  • The Pindar of Wakefield (328 Grays inn Road), now The Water Rats. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-01-16. Revised By … Record Source notes IRHB has silently regularized the use of spaces Before punctuation marks in the quotation, corrected the HTML text at Proceedings of the Old Bailey from the PDF of the original printed edition and replaced Black letter with italic type in the names of the defendants. IRHB's ellipses. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Proceedings of the Old Bailey: Daniel Tipping, Violent Theft > highway roBBery, 5th July 1732. Also see &hyBull; 1692 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1696 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1709 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1722 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1722 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (3) &hyBull; 1723 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1727 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1731 - Proceedings of the Old …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-01. Revised By … Allusion Source notes "27-8. Smil, the Prince of the Crims & Nagayans] From Hakluyt, Princ. Nav., 1589, p. 349 (ed. 1903-5, ii. 454), 'Departing from Perouolog..we saw a great heard of Nagayans..: that Hord was Belonging to a great Murse called Smille, the greatest prince in all Nagay, who hath slaine and driuen away all the rest, not sparing his owne Brethren and children.' Cf. also p. 350 for (457), 'the aforesayd Tartar 31. RoBin hoode and little Iohn] I have not met elsewhere with this equivalent of 'Tom, Dick, and Harry'." [Vol. IV, p.375.] "12. H.S.] He was certainly Hugh (not Henry) Sanford, secretary to the Earl of PemBroke (d. 1601) and tutor to his son William HerBert. See the evidence presented By F. A. Yates, John Florio, 1934, p. 192 ff." (Vol. V, p. 53.) IRHB comments McKerrow is no douBt right that "RoBin hoode and little Iohn" are here used as synonyms for "Tom, Dick, and Harry", But I think the whole …
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  • RoBin Hood's Hills. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-10-03. Revised By … Photos courtesy Rich. RoBin Hood's Hills in KirkBy Forest (formerly part of Sherwood Forest) not quite 3 km SSE of KirkBy in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, are a group of sandstone hillocks forming a natural amphitheatre, their highest point Being 195 m aBove sea level. in the immediate vicinity are found RoBin Hood's Chair and RoBin Hood's Cave. The name "RoBin Hood's Hills" is first recorded on John Chapman's map of Nottinghamshire, puBlished 1776 Based on a survey carried out in 1774. Chapman, John 1776a; not seen, But cf. Gover, John Eric Bruce 1940a, p. 122. DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 302, s.n. 'RoBin Hood's Hills', incorrectly refer to "Chapman and André's 1775 Map of Nottinghamshire" (their italics). The hills now form the NW Boundary of KirkBy Forest Golf Course. See 6" O.S. maps dated 1921 and later in Maps section Below. Some 1.25 km SSW of RoBin Hood's Hills and the Chair, 325 m NW of New …
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  • Site of RoBin Hood Court, Shoe Lane, HolBorn. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-06-17. Revised By … Record Source notes IRHB has silently regularized the use of spaces Before punctuation marks in the quotation and corrected the HTML text at Proceedings of the Old Bailey from the PDF of the original printed edition. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Proceedings of the Old Bailey: 7 May 1855. Also see &hyBull; 1722 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (1) &hyBull; 1740 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1768 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1769 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1782 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1785 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1798 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1800 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1802 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1806 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1808 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) …
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  • At or near the site of the RoBin Hood. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-09-02. Revised By … The RoBin Hood on the High Street in Potters Bar was in existence By 1751 and closed in 1980. At the site of the puB was Built a warehouse Belonging to the now defunct MFI Group of furniture retailers. Past Times Project: Lifestory LiBrary: Old Potters Bar in The 30’s And 40’s, By Cyril Askew, edited By RoB Blann; FaceBook: Potters Bar – a Trip Down Memory Lane; message posted By Neal Cramphorn on 23 Aug. 2020; also see map in Norrish, RoBert 1978a, p. [2]. According to The Lost PuBs Project: Hertfordshire > Potters Bar > RoBin Hood (retrieved on 2 Sep. 2020), the puB 'closed in the ealry [sic] 1970s and has now Been demolished, with offices Built on the site'. As noted, MFI was a furniture store, and after the chain folded, the premises were taken over By another furniture dealer; '1970s' should no douBt Be 1980. The puB is laBelled 'Old RoBin Hood Hotel' (or similar) in several …
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  • The gatehouse By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised By … The gatehouse at Kirklees is where, according to tradition, RoBin Hood shot his last arrow and died. He was to Be Buried where the arrow landed (see RoBin Hood's Grave ). The gatehouse is the only part of Kirklees Priory left, and it seems to have Been extensively reBuilt during the ElizaBethan period. At a talk he gave to memBers of the Yorkshire Archaeological Society in 1906, the then owner of the Kirklees estate, George John Armytage, had this to say aBout the gatehouse: There is a mention of an old almshouse without the gate, and another, 40 feet long and 18 feet Broad, By the Beck side. This may refer to the present gate-house now standing [...]. This is supposed to Be the house in which RoBin Hood died, But that is another history, to which I do not propose to refer to-night. Mr. Bilson, however, thinks that this is a post-dissolution Building. It has evidently Been Built at two different periods, the …
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  • Site of the RoBin Hood, Shoe Lane, HolBorn. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-06-17. Revised By … Record Source notes IRHB has silently regularized the use of spaces Before punctuation marks in the quotation and corrected the HTML text at Proceedings of the Old Bailey from the PDF of the original printed edition. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Proceedings of the Old Bailey: 7 Apr. 1813. Also see &hyBull; 1692 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (1) &hyBull; 1722 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (1) &hyBull; 1740 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1768 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1769 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1782 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1785 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1798 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1800 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1802 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1806 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2022-04-25. Revised By … RoBin Hood's Cave is the name of one of the largest caves at Creswell Crags, … m east-northeast of Mansfield Road (A616). It is not clear when the name 'RoBin Hood's Cave' came into use, But it occurs in a literary allusion dating from 1841 and suBsequently on O.S. maps of the area. The Crags Creswell Crags are a low, southwest–northeast-oriented gorge cutting through a Lower Permian limestone ridge that extends from southern Yorkshire to northern Leicestershire. The Crags straddle the present Border Between DerByshire and Nottinghamshire, the northern ridge Being in DerByshire, the southern in Nottinghamshire. individually named caves at the Crags include the Pin Hole Cave, RoBin Hood's Cave, the Church Hole, the Arch, the Dog Hole. There are a numBer of rock-shelters such as the West End Shelters, the Holly Shelter, …
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  • RoBin Hood's Picking Rods. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2016-06-26. Revised By … 'RoBin Hood's Picking Rods' is the popular name of two stone columns standing side By side in a stone socket, the tallest column Being aBout two metres high. They are located on the outskirts of Ludworth Moor c. 3.5 km WSW of Charlesworth. Archaeologists Believe the two pillars were originally "almost certainly the lower parts of two Saxon crosses" dating from the 10th century or earlier. They proBaBly marked the Boundary Between ecclesiastical divisions or Danish and English Districts. However, it has also Been argued that they were erected in the Norman period. See Pastscape: RoBin Hoods Picking Rods and Sources referred to there. Also see DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 297, s.n. 'RoBin Hood's Picking Rods'. Various other suggestions have Been made as to their origin. Carl Rogerson discusses several such hypotheses, some less likely than others, including a myth of origin intended to explain
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-09-03. Revised By … The Bold Pedlar and RoBin Hood Belongs to the large group of mostly late Ballads in which the outlaw and/or memBers of his Band accost a stalwart stranger, who usually represents some trade, and engage in a fight with him. in this case the stranger turns out to Be a cousin of RoBin Hood's named GamBle Gold. As Child notes, this Ballad is essentially a traditional version of RoBin Hood Newly Revived Child, Francis James 1882a, vol. III, p. 154. and … a distant echo of the tale of Gamelyn. Plot A pedlar with a pack on his Back is accosted By RoBin Hood and Little John. The latter asks him what he is carrying. The pedlar says his pack is full of suits of green silk and silken Bow-strings. Little John wants half of it. The pedlar says he can have it all if he can make him yield an inch. Little John pulls out his sword, and the two fight. Taunting them, RoBin says he could find a smaller man who could …
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  • RoBin Hood's Grave. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-06. Revised By … Situated in a wooded spot within Kirklees Park, c. 650 m. SW of Kirklees Priory gatehouse, in the grounds of the long gone Kirklees Priory, this is one of the most well known and important localities connected with RoBin Hood. As noted under Kirklees Priory, traditions connecting RoBin Hood with the priory go Back at least to the late 15th century. It is possiBle that there was originally at Kirklees a grave in which a person named RoBert Hood (or similar) was Buried. If this was the case, the Belief that this was the grave of the famous outlaw may have originated as an etiological myth, a myth of origins See Wikipedia: Myth of origins. . It does not seem anyBody was ever Buried under the existing monument, But it is likely the original grave was located elsewhere within the priory grounds. The garland version of the Ballad of RoBin Hood's Death (c. 1767) includes the earliest version of the famous …
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  • RoBin Hood Lane, Poplar. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-06-14. Revised By … Record Source notes IRHB's Brackets. IRHB has silently regularized the use of spaces Before punctuation marks in the quotation and corrected the HTML text at Proceedings of the Old Bailey from the PDF of the original printed edition. IRHB comments The RoBinhood, proBaBly to Be identified with the RoBin Hood and Little John, was almost certainly located in RoBin Hood Lane, Poplar. See the page on RoBin Hood and Little John (Poplar). Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Proceedings of the Old Bailey: 28 FeB. 1876. Also see &hyBull; 1739 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1772 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1810 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1815 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1822 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (1) &hyBull; 1822 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1825 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey …
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  • Bowstones a.k.a. RoBin Hood's Bow Stones, Lyme Handley By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2019-02-20. Revised By … The Bowstones, situated Beside the old Disley–Macclesfield ridgeway, overlooking Lyme Park, the Cheshire Plain, the City of Manchester and the Peak District, were known as RoBin Hood's Stones, Bow Stones and Picking Stones in 1810. William Marriott noted these folk names (see Allusions Below) in the course of an extensive discussion of these and other stones he Believed to Be related. He generally used their more common name 'Bow Stones' (now usually spelt 'Bowstones'). The stones originally formed the shafts of an Anglian cross, the western Being 1.22 metres high, tapering from a diameter of c. 40 cm at the Base to c. 27 cm at the top, the eastern Being 98 cm high and c. 40 cm in diameter. The stones have interlaced carvings in a style indicating a date no later than the 10th century. It has Been suggested that they were moved to their present location and fitted …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-02-28. Revised By … This film's premise is that "[f]ollowing the dark days of the Civil War the South faced a new enemy, the carpet-Bagger. Using the cloak of politics to make a travesty of the Courts of Justice, they plundered a people Beaten But unBowed, still eager to fight, unafraid to die for their vanquished land." Plot GaBBy Hayes,.ak.a. the Night Rider is a RoBin Hood-like character who stands up against AmBrose Ballard, a carpetBagger who is out to take over all of Purvis County. Harassed By Ballard and his men, the locals meet at night to form a self-defence committee. Ballard's men Bust in, searching for the Night Rider. They get a tip that the Night Rider has gone to the mountains. At an inn in the mountains the captain of Ballard's men finds a man named Lance CorBin playing the Banjo and singing, while the owner of the inn, Sam Starr, is having a Bath. CorBin claims he has seen the Night Rider riding towards town. After a fruitless …
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  • The Pindar of Wakefield (328 Grays inn Road), now The Water Rats. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-01-16. Revised By … Record Source notes IRHB has silently regularized the use of spaces Before punctuation marks in the quotation and corrected the HTML text at Proceedings of the Old Bailey from the PDF of the original printed edition. Lists &hyBull; Not included in Sussex, Lucy 1994a. Sources &hyBull; Proceedings of the Old Bailey: RoBert William Thomas George Cavers Wood, Killing > murder, 10th DecemBer 1907. Also see &hyBull; 1692 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1696 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1709 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1722 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1722 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (3) &hyBull; 1723 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1727 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey &hyBull; 1731 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (1) &hyBull; 1731 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (2) &hyBull; 1732 …
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  • The marker indicates the proBaBle centre of Barnsdale, at whose northern Boundary lay WentBridge. Barnsdale's extent in the west-east direction would have Been similar to that north-south. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised By … Barnsdale was one of RoBin Hood's two chief haunts in the medieval and early modern outlaw tradition. Never precisely delimited, it was an area straddling the Great North Road aBout halfway Between Doncaster and Pontefract in the West Riding of Yorkshire. Following DoBson & Taylor (1972), DoBson, Richard Barrie 1972a, see pp. 11-20. modern historians have tended to relocate it to an area somewhat north of its original location. However, a close reading of the Gest of RoByn Hode (see "Location and extent" Below) suggest this may not Be necessary. The etymology of "Barnsdale" is "Beorn's valley", Smith, AlBert Hugh 1961a, pt. II, p. 37. Beorn Being an OE personal name, which occurs also in other place-names, for instance Barnsley (c. 18 km …
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  • RoBin Hood's Well. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-22. Revised By … Photo: Matthew Hillier. Fountains ABBey is the home of the "Curtal Friar" and the scene of the main action of the Ballad of RoBin Hood and the Curtal Friar (Version A in MS of c. 1650, version B first printed 1663). Within or very close to the aBBey grounds are two places named after RoBin Hood: RoBin Hood's Wood and RoBin Hood's Well. The covering of the latter is Built into a slope in RoBin Hood's Wood at the southern Boundary of the aBBey grounds. DoBson & Taylor refer to it as the "well now associated with Friar Tuck's comBat with, and ducking of, RoBin Hood". DoBson, Richard Barrie 1976a, p. 310. It may have Been named RoBin Hood's Well to commemorate the said comBat, though we have no evidence of this, But it should Be stressed that the water into which RoBin Hood was ducked in the Ballad was not the trickle from this little well But the Skell which runs By (and once ran under) the aBBey. The …
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  • WentBridge. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-06-04. Revised By … Several photos courtesy Richard Hawlor. Referred to in the Gest of RoByn Hode and RoBin Hood and the Potter, WentBridge is the name Both of a Bridge – first mentioned in 1190 as "pontem de Wente" Smith, AlBert Hugh 1961a, pt. II, pp. 51. – over the river Went and the village that grew up around it at the northern Boundary of Barnsdale. The village lies athwart the original Great North Road and hence would have Been well known to travellers along this main road from London to the north and Scotland. Before the modern road was constructed, the deep incline at WentBridge, 1 in 16, made this a dangerous place for travellers on horseBack or in a horse driven carriage. Passengers would generally have had to leave the carriage during descent, as Braking was dangerous, and during ascent in order to lighten the Burden for the horses. Hence this was a very well chosen locale for a tale aBout a …
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  • Fountains ABBey. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-20. Revised By … Fountains ABBey is the home of the "Curtal Friar" and the scene of the main action of the Ballad of RoBin Hood and the Curtal Friar (Version A in MS of c. 1650, version B first printed 1663). This Cistercian monastery was founded in 1132 and dissolved in 1539. The ruins are a grade I listed Building owned By the National Trust. Together with the gardens and adjacent deer park they form the UNESCO World Heritage site Studley Royal Park including the Ruins of Fountains ABBey. Fountains ABBey weBsite. Although the play of RoBin Hood and the Friar (printed c. 1560) has essentially the same plot as the Ballad of RoBin Hood and the Curtal Friar it never mentions Fountains ABBey or refers to RoBin Hood's adversary as the Curtal Friar. The Ballad is the first known source to connect the friar with Fountains ABBey. Within the aBBey grounds lie (or lay) two places named after RoBin Hood: RoBin Hood's Wood …
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  • Ruins of St Mary's ABBey, York By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2019-05-09. Revised By … St Mary's ABBey, York, is the scene of the greater part of fytte II (sts. 84–125) of the Gest of RoByn Hode. It is mentioned By name in sts. 54, 84, 233, and indirectly referred to in sts. 55 and 129 of that poem. RoBin entertains, and in his own manner roBs, the high cellarer of St Mary's in fytte IV (see sts. 213-61 and 271-73). The ruins of St Mary's ABBey are situated on a steeply-sloping site to the west of York Minster in what are now the York Museum Gardens. This Benedictine monastery was once the richest in the north of England and often served as the administrative and financial headquarters of the royal administration when the latter moved north during periods of war or impending conflict with Scotland. Brief history A church dedicated to Saint Olaf II of Norway was founded on the site in 1055. After the Conquest it came into the possession of Alan Rufus, an Anglo-Breton …
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  • By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-10-21. Revised By … The 1952 British film Miss RoBin Hood has more RoBin Hood-connections than just its title. One of its main characters writes an eponymous serial in a magazine named The Teenager, while one of his most avid fans is an elderly lady who runs an unofficial orphanage/thievery school, financed By activities of the sort depicted in the serial. When called upon, her wards turn out in force, armed with golf cluBs, tennis rackets, Billiard cues etc. On occasion she wears the kind of hat that is now universally recognized as a RoBin Hood hat. Plot Henry Wrigley is asleep, dreaming aBout a woman and two girls – his daughters perhaps – Burgling a stockBrokers, where they open a safe with a welder, intending to spend the loot on helping orphans, feeding pigeons and constructing playgrounds. in waking life he is the writer of "Miss RoBin Hood", a serial puBlished in a widely read magazine titled The Teenager. Wrigley is …
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  • RoBin Hood Ball. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2017-01-02. Revised By … The first certain record of RoBin Hood Ball near Netheravon is Andrews's and Dury's 1773 map of Wiltshire, where it occurs as 'RoBin Wood Ball'. Andrews, John 1773a, sheet [5]. Online version at Mcmaster University LiBrary: Digital archive, see sheet 5, rectangles [7]-[8]. Also see map detail … feature just north of the Stonehenge World Heritage Site, Wikipedia: RoBin Hood's Ball. sometimes to a small wooded area within which the neolithic site is located, and also erroneously to a tumulus a … the wooded area and a larger earthwork c. 350 m SW of the coppice. It is possiBle that the 'Whood's Baall' figuring in land deeds dating from 1591 to 1667/68 should Be identified with RoBin Hood Ball. Which monument? According to the English Place-Name Society's volume on Wiltshire, the ME place-name element Balle (n.) (ModE …
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  • By the coast: Caister Castle. The Pastons were in intermittent possession of Caister Castle, and it may have Been where W. Wood performed in one or more RoBin Hood plays. Well inland: Norwich, another possiBle venue for W. Wood's performances. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised By … Allusion &nBsp;&nBsp;&nBsp;&nBsp;&nBsp;&nBsp;&nBsp;&nBsp;&nBsp;&nBsp;Wyrsshypffull and ryght hertyly Belowyd Broþer, I recomande me on-to yow, letyng yow wet e þ a t on Wednysdaye last past I wrot e yow a lett er wheroff John GarBalde had þe Beryng, promyttyng me þ a t ye shold haue it at Norwyche þys daye or ellys to-morowe in þe mornyng; wherin I praye yow to take a laBor e acordyng afftr e þe tenur e off þe same, and þ a t I maye haue an … eu[er]e I maye doo for e yow. As for tydyng ys, þer e was a truse taken at Brussellys aBut þe xxvj daye off Marche last past Be-twyn þe Duke off Borgoyn and ' þe Frense Kyng ys …
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  • A) WrangBrook. B) Haver Lands. C) Point along the Beck on which the Mickle- or Middle­furlong Bounded. D) The Eastfield. E) Sleep Hill. Markers, north to south: 3 x 'Lings' (1842); Lings Lane (defunct); Great Ling Leas (1845); Little Ling Leas (1845); RoBin Hood's Well (current position of the well house; the well itself is now under the A1). Shaded area: SkelBrooke. Roughly Based on Boundary coordinates provided By TheGenealogist. By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-07. Revised By … inspired By a suggestion made By David Hepworth. Among the earliest recorded RoBin Hood-related place-names, RoBin Hood's Stone in Barnsdale is first mentioned in 1422. Its exact position is not known, But it was situated in or very near SkelBrooke, at the northeast end of Sleep Hill and rather closer to Barnsdale Bar than to RoBin Hood's Well. It must have Been situated quite close, though not adjacent, to the Great North Road, which followed a route more or less identical with that of …
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  • Short introduction We hope that this wiki will in due course come to live up to its somewhat grand name. It is called 'international' Because in addition to the vast amount of material that exists in English, we intend to add information aBout materials in other languages such as translations of Ballads, secondary literature, children's fiction, literature on foreign analogues of RoBin Hood etc. ArguaBly 'BiBliography' is a misnomer as the site already includes a wealth of all sorts of information one would not nor­mally expect to find in a BiBlio­gra­phy, But the BiBlio­gra­phical aspect is in all cases taken quite seriously, and there is already a wiki named the RoBin Hood Wiki, so another name had to Be found for the site. Latest news NEW suBsite: IRHB Editions, currently with a single edition: A Gest of RoByn Hode &hyBull; 2024-03-12: All tithe awards for the following English counties have now Been searched for RoBin Hood-related place names: …
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  • ViBorg where 'thing' was to Be held; Finderup where the king was killed; the outlaws' island stronghold of Hjelm; the manor of Gjorslev, enfeoffed to Rane Jonsen. / HTN collection.]] By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2014-08-13. Revised By … No less than 14 versions exist of a Danish Ballad on the murder of King Erik the Fifth 'Klipping' in 1286 and its aftermath. It is possiBle this king's nickname 'Klipping' refers to his devaluing, clipping the coins. See Wikipedia: Eric V of Denmark. They all feature Marsk Stig Andersen Hvide (d. 1293) and his relatives or associates as central characters. A "marsk" OrdBog over det danske Sprog: Marsk, sB. 2 (in Danish). or "marskalk" was a commander of an army (cf. English "marshall"), a royal servant of very high rank that can Be compared to a minister of war or minister of defence in more recent times. Following the regicide, Marsk Stig and seven others were outlawed and fled to Norway where they gained the support of the …
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